Telenet Japan
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at [[:ja:日本テレネット (ゲーム会社)]]; see its history for attribution.
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{{Translated|ja|日本テレネット (ゲーム会社)}}
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Native name | 株式会社日本テレネット |
---|---|
Romanized name | Kabushiki-gaisha Nihon Terenetto |
Industry | Software development |
Founded | October 1983; 41 years ago (1983-10) |
Founder | Kazuyuki Fukushima |
Defunct | October 25, 2007; 17 years ago (2007年10月25日) |
Fate | Bankruptcy |
Website | www |
Telenet Japan Co., Ltd. (株式会社日本テレネット, Kabushiki-gaisha Nihon Terenetto) was a Japanese video game and software developer founded in October 1983 by Kazuyuki Fukushima.[citation needed ] The company had several video game divisions including: Wolf Team, Laser Soft, Renovation Game (Japanese publishing division), Renovation Products (North America publishing division), Riot, Commseed, and Telenet Jr.[1] Telenet Japan's North American subsidiary, Renovation Products, was acquired by Sega of America in 1993.[2] With debt of \1 billion, the company ceased operating in late September 2007 and closed its doors on October 25.[3] [4] Sunsoft acquired Telenet's entire software library in December 2009, citing plans to remake or re-release (via Virtual Console) the old titles.[5] The Japanese company Edia acquired Telenet's catalogue from City Connection in January 2020.[6]
Riot
[edit ]The Riot division came into existence in 1991 when Telenet Japan was expanding in the country.[citation needed ]
However, because Telenet was starting to lose sales in 1993, the company went through extensive restructuring which resulted in the closing of a few subsidiaries. Some staff employed at Laser Soft and Riot were transferred to another subsidiary, Wolfteam. The same year, several key developers of the PC Engine games Tenshi no Uta I & II left Riot to found Media.Vision and work on a new RPG franchise, Wild Arms .[citation needed ]
Riot was also known for employing graphic artist and later game director Eiji Kikuchi, as well as music composer Michiko Naruke.[citation needed ]
Games list
[edit ]Developed
[edit ]- Mega Drive/Genesis
- MSX
- Nintendo 64
- Parlor Pro Pachinko
- GameCube
- Swingerz Golf (released as Ace Golf in Europe and Wai Wai Golf in Japan)
- PlayStation 2
- Eagle Eye Golf (released as Enjoy Golf! in Japan)
- Mahjong Party: Idol to Mahjong Shoubu
- PC
- Super Famicom/Super NES
- Ace o Nerae!
- Dark Kingdom
- Edo no Kiba
- Psycho Dream
- Super Valis IV
- Sharp X1/X1 Turbo
- NEC PC-88/PC-8800 series
- PC Engine/TurboGrafx-16/TurboGrafx
- Avenger
- Babel
- Browning
- Columns (video game)
- Cosmic Fantasy
- Cosmic Fantasy 2
- Cosmic Fantasy Visual Collection
- Cosmic Fantasy III
- Cosmic Fantasy IV-Chapter 1
- Cosmic Fantasy IV-Chapter 2
- Death Bringer
- Dekoboko Densetsu Hashiru Wagamanma
- Exile
- Exile: Wicked Phenomenon
- Final Zone II
- F1 Team Simulation Project F
- Golden Axe
- High Grenadier
- Jantei Monogatari
- Kiaidan 00
- Lady Phantom
- Last Alert
- Legion
- Maho Shoujo Silky Lip
- Master of Monsters
- Meikyu no Elfeene
- Mirai Shounen Conan
- Valis: The Fantasm Soldier
- Valis II
- Valis III
- Valis IV
- Valis Visual Collection
- Police Connection
- Pop 'n Magic
- Psychic Storm
- Puzzle Boy
- Sugoroku '92 Nari Tore Nariagari Trendy
- Super Albatross
- Tenshi no Uta
- Tenshi no Uta II: Datenshi no Sentaku
- Travel Epule
- Xak I & II
Published
[edit ]- Game Boy
- Pachinko CR: Daiku no Gen-San GB
- Game Gear
- Mega Drive/Genesis
- Gaiares
- Syd of Valis
- The Tennis Tournament: Grandslam
- Traysia
- Valis III
- Valis: The Fantasm Soldier
- Zan: Yasha Enbukyoku
- Arcus Odyssey
- El Viento
- Elemental Master
- Gain Ground
- Earnest Evans
- Whip Rush
- Arrow Flash
- Dino Land
- Exile
- Beast Wrestler
- Master of Monsters
- Sol-Deace
- Valis: The Fantasm Soldier
- Ys III: Wanderers from Ys
- Granada
- Final Zone
- Mega-CD
- MSX
- Sa-Zi-Ri
- Valis II
- Albatross Tournament Golf
- American Truck
- Digital Devil Story: Megami Tensei
- Nintendo 64
- Parlor Pro Pachinko
- Sharp X1/X1 Turbo
- NEC PC-88/PC-8800 series
- PC
- PlayStation
- PlayStation 2
- Super Famicom/Super NES
- PC Engine/TurboGrafx-16/TurboGrafx
- Andre Panza Kick Boxing
- Avenger
- Babel
- Browning
- Columns
- Cosmic Fantasy
- Cosmic Fantasy II
- Cosmic Fantasy Visual Collection
- Cosmic Fantasy III
- Cosmic Fantasy IV-Chapter 1
- Cosmic Fantasy IV-Chapter 2
- Death Bringer
- Dekoboko Densetsu Hashiru Wagamanma
- Exile
- Exile: Wicked Phenomenon
- Final Zone II
- F1 Team Simulation Project F
- Golden Axe
- High Grenadier
- Jantei Monogatari
- Kiaiden 00
- Lady Phantom
- Last Alert
- Legion
- Maho Shoujo Silky Lip
- Meikyu no Elfeene
- Mirai Shounen Conan
- Super Albatross
- Valis: The Fantasm Soldier
- Valis II
- Valis III
- Valis IV
- Valis Visual Collection
- Police Connection
- Pop 'n Magic
- Psychic Storm
- Puzzle Boy
- Sugoroku '92 Nari Tore Nariagari Trendy
- Super Albatross
- Tenshi no Uta
- Tenshi no Uta II: Datenshi no Sentaku
- Travel Apple
- Xak I & II
- Sharp X68000
References
[edit ]- ^ "Column: 'Might Have Been' - Telenet Japan". GameSetWatch . December 17, 2007. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
- ^ Bidwell, Chris (November 6, 2002). "Sega ReVisions #2". IGN . Retrieved February 10, 2021.
- ^ Gantayat, Anoop (October 31, 2007). "Nihon Telnet Closes Shop". IGN . Retrieved February 10, 2020.
- ^ "「夢幻戦士ヴァリス」の日本テレネットが事業停止". ITmedia. October 30, 2007. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
- ^ aueki (December 10, 2009). "サンソフト,日本テレネット作品100タイトル以上の版権を獲得,北米市場に再参入". 4Gamer.net . Retrieved February 10, 2021.
- ^ "エディア、シティコネクションからゲームソフト139タイトルに係る知的財産権を取得...旧・日本テレネット系タイトルが取得対象に". Social Game Info. January 14, 2020. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
External links
[edit ]- Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived September 11, 2008)
- Giant Bomb Profile
- MobyGames Profile