Difference between revisions of "Hiroaki Shoji"
From Sega Retro
(Added mention of brother Hidenori and MJ notability) |
|||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
| education= | | education= | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | {{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (庄司 弘明) joined [[Sega]] in 1992 as a programmer at [[Sega AM2]]. He is best-known for his extensive work on the ''[[:category:MJ | + | {{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (庄司 弘明) joined [[Sega]] in 1992 as a programmer at [[Sega AM2]], his first work being ''[[Soreike Kokology]]''. He is best-known for his extensive work on the ''[[:category:MJ|Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ]]'' series, becoming its director with the [[Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ3|third generation]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20081008060939/http://sega.jp/segavoice/vol25/}}. Hiroaki is the older brother of composer [[Hidenori Shoji]]{{ref|1=https://web.archive.org/web/20231019081451/https://vgmdb.net/forums/showthread.php?t=28014}}. |
==Production history== | ==Production history== |
Revision as of 16:09, 1 January 2024
Hiroaki Shoji |
---|
Employment history: Sega Enterprises (1992[1] – )
Divisions:
Divisions:
|
Role(s): Programmer, director |
This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
Hiroaki Shoji (庄司 弘明) joined Sega in 1992 as a programmer at Sega AM2, his first work being Soreike Kokology. He is best-known for his extensive work on the Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ series, becoming its director with the third generation[1]. Hiroaki is the older brother of composer Hidenori Shoji[2].
Production history
- Soreike Kokology (System 32; 1992)
- Burning Rival (System 32; 1993) — Program (as 庄司 弘明)
- Virtua Fighter (Model 1; 1993) — Program Supports
- Virtua Fighter (Saturn; 1994) — Programmers[3]
- Virtua Fighter Remix (Saturn; 1995) — Programmers[4]
- Virtua Fighter (32X; 1995) — Special Thanks[5]
- Virtua Fighter 2 (Saturn; 1995) — Motion Program etc.[6] (as 庄司 弘明)
- Virtua Fighter Kids (Sega Titan Video; 1996) — Motion Program (Many many Thanks)
- Virtua Fighter PC (Windows PC; 1996) — Programmers
- Shenmue (Dreamcast; 1999) — Chief Battle System Programmer
- US Shenmue (Dreamcast; 2001) — Chief Programer
- Shenmue II (Dreamcast; 2001) — Chief Battle System Programmer
- Virtua Fighter 4 (PlayStation 2; 2002) — Training System[7] (as 庄司 弘明)
- Sega Yonin Uchi Mahjong MJ (NAOMI Satellite Terminal; 2002) — Programmer
- Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ2 (Chihiro Satellite Terminal; 2004) — Programmer
- Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ3 (Chihiro Satellite Terminal; 2005) — Director
- Yakuza 0 (PlayStation 3; 2015) — SEGA NET Mahjong MJ Team (as Hiroaki Shouji)
- Virtua Fighter 4: Evolution (2002) — Training System
- Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ4 (2008)
- Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ5 (2011)
- Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ5 Evolution (2013)
Interviews
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 http://sega.jp/segavoice/vol25/ (Wayback Machine: 2008-10-08 06:09)
- ↑ https://vgmdb.net/forums/showthread.php?t=28014 (Wayback Machine: 2023-10-19 08:14)
- ↑ File:VirtuaF1 Saturn JP SSOpening.pdf
- ↑ File:VirtuaFR Saturn JP SSEnding.pdf
- ↑ File:Virtua Fighter 32X credits.pdf
- ↑ File:VirtuaF2 Saturn JP SSEnding.pdf
- ↑ File:VirtuaFighter4_PS2_JP_SSCredits.pdf
Categories:
- No portrait
- Sega Enterprises, Ltd. employees
- Sega AM2 staff members
- Sega Software R&D Dept. 2 staff members
- AM2 of CRI staff members
- Sega-AM2 (company) employees
- Sega Corporation (2000-2015) employees
- Sega AM2 (2004-2011) staff members
- Sega R&D2 (2011-2015) staff members
- Programmers
- Directors
- All people
- Sub-stubs
- Uncredited role
- Use ProductionHistory template