Difference between revisions of "GameTek"
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| headquarters=2999 NE 191st St., Suite 800, North Miami Beach, Florida, 33180, United States{{magref|egrn|8|28}}{{fileref|SummerCES1991 Directory.pdf|page=186}} | | headquarters=2999 NE 191st St., Suite 800, North Miami Beach, Florida, 33180, United States{{magref|egrn|8|28}}{{fileref|SummerCES1991 Directory.pdf|page=186}} | ||
| headquarters2=3 Harbor Drive, Suite 110, Sausalito, California, 94965, United States{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19961105052613/http://www.gametek.com/webfinall/front_page/corp.html}} | | headquarters2=3 Harbor Drive, Suite 110, Sausalito, California, 94965, United States{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19961105052613/http://www.gametek.com/webfinall/front_page/corp.html}} |
Latest revision as of 13:46, 27 February 2023
GameTek | ||||
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Founded: 1987 | ||||
Defunct: 1998-07 | ||||
T-series code: T-83 | ||||
Headquarters:
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GameTek, Inc. was a company that developed, published, marketed and distributed a broad line of interactive entertainment, educational and productivity software for use on personal computers and Nintendo, Sega, 3DO, and Sony platforms. The company's products, included TV game shows and productivity titles for adults; action, fantasy and simulation games for teenagers; and developmental and educational titles for children.
It was formed in 1987 as a subsidiary of I.J.E., Inc. I.J.E. was initially established in 1977 under the name I.J.E. Distributing, Inc. to distribute pre-recorded children's entertainment products under the trade name "Kid Stuff." From 1977 to 1985 I.J.E. and its affiliated acquired a number of licenses to develop entertainment products based upon certain television shows, sports entities and name brand children's products. I.J.E.'s original founder Irwin H. Schwartz sold I.J.E. to an unaffiliated third party in 1985 and then formed Gabco, Inc. in 1987 to reacquire I.J.E. GameTek was founded as a result to exploit these licenses in the software market. In October 1993 the company changed its name to GameTek (FL), Inc. and Gabco, Inc. became GameTek, Inc.
The company maintained offices in Florida, California and North Carolina. GameTek filed for bankruptcy in 1997 and closed in July 1998. Some of the company's assets were acquired by Take 2 Interactive in 1997.
GameTek were once set to publish seven Codemasters titles in the US, but Codemasters opted to publish some of these games themselves.
Contents
Softography
Master System
- Prophecy I: The Viking Child (unreleased)
Mega Drive
- The Gadget Twins (1992)
- The Humans (1992)
- Zool (1993)
- American Gladiators (1993)
- Jeopardy! (1993)
- Nigel Mansell's World Championship Racing (1993)
- Brutal: Paws of Fury (1994)
- Yogi Bear: Cartoon Capers (1994)
- Jeopardy! Deluxe Edition (1994)
- Jeopardy! Sports Edition (1994)
- Harlem Globetrotters (unreleased)
- Humans 2 (unreleased)
- Ragnarok (unreleased)
- Wheel of Fortune 2 (unreleased)
Game Gear
- Jeopardy! (1993)
- Tesserae (1993)
- Jeopardy! Sports Edition (1994)
- Tarzan: Lord of the Jungle (1994)
- Zool (1994)
- Pinball Dreams (1994)
- Prophecy I: The Viking Child (unreleased)
- Ragnarok (unreleased)
- Yogi Bear in Yogi Bear's Goldrush (unreleased)
Mega-CD
- Brutal: Paws of Fury (1994)
32X
Saturn
- Death Throttle: Kakuzetsu Toshi kara no Dasshutsu (1996)
- NFL '97 (1996)
- BloodStorm (unreleased)
References
- ↑ Electronic Gaming Retail News, "January 1992" (US; 199x-xx-xx), page 28
- ↑ Summer CES Directory, page 186
- ↑ http://www.gametek.com/webfinall/front_page/corp.html (Wayback Machine: 1996-11-05 05:26)