Difference between revisions of "Takashi Yamada"

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{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (山田 高史)
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{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (山田 高史) is a programmer at [[Sega of Japan]]. In his early years at Sega and [[Hitmaker]], he was well-known within the company for spending thousands of yen on [[wikipedia:Bishōjo game|Bishoujo games]], but for mainly working on the complete opposite kinds of games: ''[[L.A. Machineguns]]'', the ''[[:category:Crazy Taxi (franchise)|Crazy Taxi]]'' series, and later, the ''[[:category:Initial D|Initial D]]'' series.
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For the Hitmaker column Hito Maker, Yamada analyzed the various stages a "gal gamer" typically went through when discovering their love of the genre{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20030625140228/http://www.hitmaker.co.jp/top/lounge/corumun/site/corumun_txt54.htm}} This was followed up by [[Atsushi Watanabe]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20030804190435/http://www.hitmaker.co.jp/top/lounge/corumun/site/corumun_txt55.htm}} This was followed by several entries into the column written by Hitmaker's [[Atsushi Watanabe]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20030804190435/http://www.hitmaker.co.jp/top/lounge/corumun/site/corumun_txt55.htm}}, [[Daisuke Ide]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20030804190248/http://www.hitmaker.co.jp/top/lounge/corumun/site/corumun_txt56.htm}} and [[Yasuto Muraki]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20030804190556/http://www.hitmaker.co.jp/top/lounge/corumun/site/corumun_txt57.htm}} about their first encounters with Yamada.
  
 
==Production history==
 
==Production history==

Revision as of 13:11, 22 March 2024

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Takashi Yamada
Employment history:
Divisions:
Divisions:
Role(s): Programmer

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Takashi Yamada (山田 高史) is a programmer at Sega of Japan. In his early years at Sega and Hitmaker, he was well-known within the company for spending thousands of yen on Bishoujo games, but for mainly working on the complete opposite kinds of games: L.A. Machineguns, the Crazy Taxi series, and later, the Initial D series.

For the Hitmaker column Hito Maker, Yamada analyzed the various stages a "gal gamer" typically went through when discovering their love of the genre[2] This was followed up by Atsushi Watanabe[3] This was followed by several entries into the column written by Hitmaker's Atsushi Watanabe[3], Daisuke Ide[1] and Yasuto Muraki[4] about their first encounters with Yamada.

Production history

External links

  • Hito Maker entry 54

References