Difference between revisions of "HOT-B"

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Fellow Japanese game developer [[Genki]] found early success performing subcontracted programming work for HOT-B.
 
Fellow Japanese game developer [[Genki]] found early success performing subcontracted programming work for HOT-B.
  
They went bankrupt in 1993 and were later bought out by [[Starfish-SD]], a company formed by former HOT-B employees; the HOT-B name was kept as the name of the company's American division for a little over the next decade. The 2005 [[PlayStation 2]] game ''Graffiti Kingdom'' appears to have been their most recently-published title
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They went bankrupt in 1993 and were later bought out by [[Starfish-SD]], a company formed by former HOT-B employees; the HOT-B name was kept as the name of the company's American division for a little over the next decade. The 2005 [[PlayStation 2]] game ''Graffiti Kingdom'' appears to have been their most recently-published title.
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==

Latest revision as of 06:27, 21 December 2021

https://retrocdn.net/images/2/2b/HotB_logo.png

HotB logo.png
HOT-B
Founded: 1983
Defunct: 1993
T-series code: T-28
Merged into: Starfish-SD (1993)
Headquarters:
Japan

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HOT-B (ホット・ビィ) was a Japanese video game developer and publisher known for their frequent uncredited contract development work.

History

Fellow Japanese game developer Genki found early success performing subcontracted programming work for HOT-B.

They went bankrupt in 1993 and were later bought out by Starfish-SD, a company formed by former HOT-B employees; the HOT-B name was kept as the name of the company's American division for a little over the next decade. The 2005 PlayStation 2 game Graffiti Kingdom appears to have been their most recently-published title.

Softography

External links

References


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