NEC Avenue
Type | Division |
---|---|
Industry | Music, Video games |
Founded | 1987 |
Defunct | January 29, 1999 |
Fate | Dissolved |
Headquarters | Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo, Japan Takatsu-ku, Kawasaki, Japan |
Number of employees | 50 (1994)[1] |
Parent | NEC |
NEC Avenue, Ltd. (NECアベニュー株式会社, NEC Abenyū Kabushiki-gaisha) was a Japanese music and video game publisher.
History[]
NEC Avenue was founded in 1987 as a record label within NEC. NEC Avenue eventually got involved with video games, and secured licenses to produce console versions of arcade titles from Sega and Taito. Toshio Tabeta, the employee responsible for the Sega deal, would later learn that the Sega employee that gave NEC Avenue permission to make arcade ports was scolded.[2] Video game records represented about 10% of NEC Avenue's business in 1994.[1] In October 1995, its game division was spun-off into a new NEC subsidiary named NEC Interchannel. NEC Interchannel took over NEC Avenue's music and game operations in October 1997, then acquired its music subsidiary, NEC Avenue Music Publishing (NECアベニュー音楽出版, NEC Abenyū Ongaku Shuppan), in March 1998.[3][4] NEC Avenue was dissolved on January 29, 1999, and NEC Avenue Music Publishing became IC Avenue Music Publishing after Interchannel split from NEC in 2004.[5][6]
Artists[]
- DOME
- Joe Hisaishi
- Junko Yagami
- Katsuhiko Nakagawa
- Monday Michiru
- Nobukazu Takemura
- Shinji Harada
- Takako Ōta
Video games[]
- Space Harrier (1988)
- Fantasy Zone (1988)
- SonSon II (1989)
- Hyper Dyne Side Arms (1989)
- F-1 Dream (1989)
- Jūōki (1989)
- Side Arms Special (1989)
- Darius Alpha (1990)
- Super Darius (1990)
- Dai Makaimura (1990)
- Operation Wolf (1990)
- After Burner II (1990)
- Thunder Blade (1990)
- Daisenpū (1990)
- Out Run (1990)
- Hellfire S (1991)
- Splash Lake (1991)
- Daisenpū Custom (1991)
- Might & Magic (1992)
- Bonanza Bros. (1992)
- Forgotten Worlds (1992)
- Dragon Knight II (1992)
- Gain Ground SX (1992)
- Horror Story (1993)
- Rainbow Islands (1993)
- Super Darius II (1993)
- Puyo Puyo CD (1994)
- Tenchi wo Kurau (1994)
- Chiki Chiki Boys (1994)
- Dragon Knight III (1994)
- Strider Hiryū (1994)
- Dragon Knight & Graffiti (1995)
- Tenchi Muyō! Ryōōki (1995)
- Space Invaders: The Original Game (1995)
- Asuka 120% Maxima (1995)
- Dōkyūsei (1995)
- Dōkyūsei 2 (1996)
- Madō Monogatari: Honō no Sotsuenji (1996)
- Dragon Knight 4 (1997)
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Edge UK Edition Issue ten: NEC Avenue". Edge. Future Publishing. July 1994. p. 38-39.
- ^ "Gaming Life in Japan: Toshio Tabeta". IGN. 2006-07-10. Retrieved 2021-06-20.
- ^ "インターチャネルのあゆみ". Interchannel. Archived from the original on 2004-10-21. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
- ^ "The History of NEC Interchannel". Interchannel. Archived from the original on 2004-08-15. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
- ^ "@fun STAGE". Interchannel. 2004-07-23. Archived from the original on 2004-07-23. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
- ^ "@fun STAGE". Interchannel. 2004-08-28. Archived from the original on 2004-08-28. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
- Video game companies established in 1987
- Video game companies disestablished in 1999
- Defunct video game companies of Japan
- Japanese companies established in 1987
- Japanese companies disestablished in 1999
- Former NEC subsidiaries