Difference between revisions of "Masanobu Yamamoto"
From Sega Retro
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==Production history== | ==Production history== | ||
− | {{ProductionHistory|Masanobu Yamamoto|Mt. Book|Mt Book|やまもと まさのぶ|山本 正伸}} | + | {{ProductionHistory|Masanobu Yamamoto|M.Yamamo|Mt. Book|Mt Book|やまもと まさのぶ|山本 正伸}} |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 04:59, 16 November 2023
Masanobu Yamamoto |
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Employment history:
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Role(s): Programmer |
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Masanobu Yamamoto (山本 正伸) is a programmer. In the 90's, he was viewed as one of the top 3 programmers of Sega's home console games, alongside Yuji Naka and Takahiro Hamano[2][3].
Aliases
Masanobu Yamamoto is confirmed to have worked on Michael Jackson's Moonwalker, which features a programmer named Mt. Book[4]. This is a direct translation of the characters in his surname: Mountain (山) and Book (本).
Production history
- Galaxy Force (Master System; 1989) — Assistant Programmer (as M.Yamamo)
- Michael Jackson's Moonwalker (Mega Drive; 1990) — Programmer[5] (as Mt. Book)
- Mercs (Mega Drive; 1991) — Programmers[6] (as Mt Book)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Mega Drive; 1992) — Assistant Programmers[7]
- Sonic & Knuckles (Mega Drive; 1994) — Senior Programmers[8]
- Die Hard Arcade (Sega Titan Video; 1996) — Enemy Programmer
- Die Hard Arcade (Saturn; 1997) — Enemy Programmer[9]
- Sonic Adventure (Dreamcast; 1998) — Player character programmers
- ChuChu Rocket! (Dreamcast; 1999) — プログラマー (as やまもと まさのぶ)
- Phantasy Star Online (Dreamcast; 2000) — Chartacter
- Phantasy Star Online Ver. 2 (Dreamcast; 2001) — Character
- Sonic Adventure 2 (Dreamcast; 2001) — Product Support
- Phantasy Star Online Episode I & II (GameCube; 2002) — Chartacter
- Phantasy Star Online Episode I & II (Xbox; 2003) — Chartacter
- Sonic Adventure DX: Director's Cut (GameCube; 2003) — Technical Director
- Sonic Adventure DX: Director's Cut (GameCube; 2003) — Lead System Programmer
- Puyo Pop Fever (NAOMI; 2003) — Manager
- Puyo Pop Fever (PlayStation 2; 2004) — Manager
- Puyo Pop Fever (Dreamcast; 2004) — Manager
- Puyo Pop Fever (GameCube; 2004) — Manager
- Puyo Pop Fever (Game Boy Advance; 2004) — Manager[10]
- Puyo Pop Fever (Windows PC; 2004) — Manager
- Sega Superstars (PlayStation 2; 2004) — Special Thanks
- Puyo Pop Fever (Nintendo DS; 2004) — Manager
- Puyo Pop Fever (PlayStation Portable; 2004) — Manager
- Puyo Puyo Fever 2 (PlayStation 2; 2005) — Program Manager
- Shadow the Hedgehog (PlayStation 2; 2005) — Special Thanks
- Shadow the Hedgehog (GameCube; 2005) — Special Thanks
- Shadow the Hedgehog (Xbox; 2005) — Special Thanks
- Sega Ages 2500 Series Vol. 26: Dynamite Deka (PlayStation 2; 2006) — Special Thanks
- Sonic the Hedgehog (PlayStation 3; 2006) — Special Thanks
- Sonic the Hedgehog (Xbox 360; 2006) — Special Thanks
- Sonic and the Secret Rings (Wii; 2007) — Special Thanks
- NiGHTS: Journey of Dreams (Wii; 2007) — Special Thanks
- The House of the Dead 2 & 3 Return (Wii; 2008) — Special Thanks
References
- ↑ @SiFi_TZK on Twitter (Wayback Machine: 2023-10-17 06:54)
- ↑ @SiFi_TZK on Twitter (Wayback Machine: 2023-10-17 06:52)
- ↑ @SiFi_TZK on Twitter (Wayback Machine: 2022-08-20 05:01)
- ↑ @Har7201 on X
- ↑ File:Moonwalker MD credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Mercs MD credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Sonic the Hedgehog 2 MD credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Sonic & Knuckles MD credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Die Hard Arcade Saturn credits.pdf
- ↑ File:Puyo Puyo Fever GBA credits.pdf
Categories:
- No portrait
- Sega of Japan employees
- Sega CS1 staff members
- Sega of America employees
- Sega Technical Institute staff members
- Sega CS3 (1996-1999) staff members
- Sega Software R&D Dept. 8 staff members
- Sonic Team (company) employees
- Global Entertainment R&D Dept. 1 staff members
- Programmers
- All people
- Sub-stubs
- Lead Programmers