Difference between revisions of "Koji Umeda"

From Sega Retro

m (Text replacement - "Dwango" to "Dwango")
 
Line 17: Line 17:
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Employment
 
{{Employment
| company=Dwango
+
| company=[[Dwango]]
 
| start=2012-04{{ref|https://www.facebook.com/koji.umeda.35/about_work_and_education}}
 
| start=2012-04{{ref|https://www.facebook.com/koji.umeda.35/about_work_and_education}}
 
| end=2014-03{{ref|https://www.facebook.com/koji.umeda.35/about_work_and_education}}
 
| end=2014-03{{ref|https://www.facebook.com/koji.umeda.35/about_work_and_education}}

Latest revision as of 09:08, 18 August 2024

KojiUmeda segamagjp6.jpg
Koji Umeda
Place of birth: Gifu, Japan[1]
Employment history:
Sega of Japan (1992-09[2] – 1997-10[2])
Divisions:
Softbank Creative (1997-09[2] – 2012-04[2])
Dwango (2012-04[2] – 2014-03[2])
Hacosta (2015-12[2] – 2018[2])
Role(s): Marketing

This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.


Koji Umeda (梅田 浩二), also known as Ume (ウメ), was a publicist at Sega, promoting AM2 games including Virtua Fighter. He left the company to become a magazine editor at Softbank Creative, becoming the editor-in-chief of Gemaga in 2004, remaining an editor until the magazine was discontinued in 2012.[1]

Production history

Games

Music

Magazine articles

Main article: Koji Umeda/Magazine articles.

External links

References