Difference between revisions of "Masamoto Morita"

From Sega Retro

Line 30: Line 30:
 
Under [[WOW Entertainment]], he shifted his focus from arcades to console and handheld games, culminating in being the lead game designer for the 2004 PS2 game ''[[Blood Will Tell: Tezuka Osamu's Dororo]]'', himself a massive fan of the original manga, and being satisfied with the high-budget product he was able to develop.{{ref|https://www.4gamer.net/games/999/G999905/20181206063/}}
 
Under [[WOW Entertainment]], he shifted his focus from arcades to console and handheld games, culminating in being the lead game designer for the 2004 PS2 game ''[[Blood Will Tell: Tezuka Osamu's Dororo]]'', himself a massive fan of the original manga, and being satisfied with the high-budget product he was able to develop.{{ref|https://www.4gamer.net/games/999/G999905/20181206063/}}
  
Wanting to break out of the game industry, Morita became intriqued with the game-like experiences possible using browser services such as [[wikipedia:Google Maps|Google Maps]]. He ran the website for a 3D shoot em' up developed by Asahi Net's founder, which was his gateway into joining said company in January 2006. His most lasting contribution to the company is the learning management system manaba,{{ref|https://asahi-net.co.jp/en/corporate/service/}} which he thought was a good service with poor presentation, so he used the skills he learned at Sega to refine features and redesign the user interface without sacrificing any of the base program.{{ref|https://www.4gamer.net/games/999/G999905/20181206063/}}
+
Wanting to break out of the game industry, Morita became intriqued with the game-like experiences possible using browser services such as [[wikipedia:Google Maps|Google Maps]]. He ran the website for a 3D shoot em' up developed by Asahi Net's founder, which was his gateway into joining said company in January 2006. His most lasting contribution to the company is the learning management system ''manaba'',{{ref|https://asahi-net.co.jp/en/corporate/service/}} which he thought was a good service with poor presentation, so he used the skills he learned at Sega to refine features and redesign the user interface without sacrificing any of the base program.{{ref|https://www.4gamer.net/games/999/G999905/20181206063/}}
  
 
==Production history==
 
==Production history==

Revision as of 07:00, 26 February 2023

MasamotoMorita DCM JP20010223.png
Masamoto Morita
Employment history:
Divisions:
Asahi Net (2006-01[2] – )
Role(s): Director, Designer

Masamoto Morita (森田 真基) was a director at Sega who specialized in puzzle games.

Career

He joined in 1994 after being impressed by the 3D graphics of Virtua Fighter, wanting to work at a developer that provided opportunities to work in 3D, such as Sega AM3, but was instead assigned to Sega AM1, where he mainly developed fortune-telling games and puzzle games. The mass output and short development periods of the department instead gave him the opportunity to experience a variety of games in various stages, from design, to early development, to location testing, to final release.[2]

Under WOW Entertainment, he shifted his focus from arcades to console and handheld games, culminating in being the lead game designer for the 2004 PS2 game Blood Will Tell: Tezuka Osamu's Dororo, himself a massive fan of the original manga, and being satisfied with the high-budget product he was able to develop.[2]

Wanting to break out of the game industry, Morita became intriqued with the game-like experiences possible using browser services such as Google Maps. He ran the website for a 3D shoot em' up developed by Asahi Net's founder, which was his gateway into joining said company in January 2006. His most lasting contribution to the company is the learning management system manaba,[3] which he thought was a good service with poor presentation, so he used the skills he learned at Sega to refine features and redesign the user interface without sacrificing any of the base program.[2]

Production history


Magazine articles

Main article: Masamoto Morita/Magazine articles.

References