Natsume (company)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Natsume
TypePrivate
IndustryVideo game developer and publisher
FoundedOctober 20, 1987 (Natsume-Atari)
May 1988 (Natsume Inc.)
HeadquartersShinjuku, Tokyo, Japan[1]
Burlingame, California, United States[2]
Key people
Takashi Matsumoto (CEO, Natsume-Atari)
Hiro Maekawa (President, Natsume Inc)
Taka Maekawa (President, Natsume Inc Japan)
ProductsHarvest Moon
Lufia
Pocky and Rocky
Rune Factory
Reel Fishing
River King
Revenue719,000,000 Japanese yen Edit this on Wikidata
Number of employees
150 (Natsume-Atari)[1]
Websitewww.natsumeatari.co.jp (Natsume-Atari)
www.natsume.com (Natsume Inc)

Natsume (Japanese: ナツメ) is the name of two video game publishers, Natsume-Atari and Natsume Inc., that were once the same company but are now completely separated.

Natsume Co., Ltd. was founded in Japan on October 20, 1987.[1] It established an American division called Natsume Inc. in 1988. In 1995, Natsume Inc. split from Natsume Co., Ltd. to become an independent company. The name "Natsume" was retained by both companies in their respective countries. In 2013, Natsume Co., Ltd. renamed itself Natsume-Atari following a merger with its subsidiary Atari that year.[3] Also in 2013, Natsume Inc. (the American company) inaugurated a Japanese division called Natsume Inc. Japan with no connection to its former parent company.[4]

Natsume-Atari is based in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan and is known for developing licensed titles and mobile games. Natsume Inc. is located in Burlingame, California[2] and is best known for publishing unique, family-oriented niche games, such as Harvest Moon and Reel Fishing.

Products[]

During the NES and SNES era, Natsume Co Ltd developed numerous titles, often licensed, such as Power Rangers. Natsume Inc published a wide range of titles, including those developed by Natsume Co. Ltd., such as S.C.A.T., Wild Guns and Shadow of the Ninja. Natsume also released the SNES game Pocky & Rocky as well as Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals. Natsume Co., Ltd. had also developed the Medarot games up until the end of the GBA era, and Natsume Inc. published some of them outside of Japan.

A sizeable amount of Natsume Co., Ltd.'s products were video games it developed for other publishers. Some of its biggest clients over the years included Imagineer, Bandai, THQ and Taito. Most of Natsume Co., Ltd.'s video games, as a sub-contractor, were original titles, but it occasionally developed some ports as well. Taito, in particular, outsourced the development of three of its Sega Master System ports to Natsume Co., Ltd.: Sagaia, Renegade and Special Criminal Investigation.[5]

From the end of the Super NES era up until late 2014, Natsume Inc. was known for publishing a series of Story of Seasons games in North America. The last game in the series it published was Harvest Moon: A New Beginning for the Nintendo 3DS. In 2015 the developer of the series, Marvelous AQL, brought the next game in the series, Story of Seasons, to North America with its own US branch, Xseed Games, ending the relationship it had with Natsume. Since then, Natsume has released its own games under the Harvest Moon name, starting with Harvest Moon: The Lost Valley,[6] continuing with Harvest Moon: Seeds of Memories and Harvest Moon: Skytree Village.

Natsume has also operated an eBay shop, selling copies of older games sealed in their original packaging, collected from storage at its offices. At auction, the company sold a sealed copy of Pocky & Rocky for over $1,600.[7]

Corporate divisions[]

Natsume Co., Ltd. was previously the parent company of Natsume Inc., founded in May 1988. Natsume Inc. started publishing video games in 1990.[8] By 1995, Natsume Inc. had broken away into its own company and is separately owned and operated.[9]

In October 2002, Natsume Co., Ltd. founded the pachinko company Atari Inc. (not to be confused with the American game company) in Osaka, which specialized in developing slot and pinball machines.

On May 6, 2005, Natsume Solution began operation in Shinjuku. This division specializes on web site development, providing mobile solutions/services and developing web systems. On March 1, 2006, Natsume Solution was merged with Evolve.

Meanwhile, Natsume Inc. opened up a development studio of its own, named Natsume Inc. Japan.[4]

Natsume Co., Ltd. changed its name to Natsume-Atari in October 2013, and it is not directly connected to Natsume Inc. or its subsidiary Natsume Inc. Japan.[10] Despite their corporate split off, Natsume-Atari and Natsume Inc. have continued to collaborate on a number of occasions.[11][12]

Works[]

Pre-split Natsume[]

These are games produced while Natsume Inc., was still operating as a subsidiary of Natsume Co., Ltd. Natsume Inc. would publish only Natsume Co., Ltd.'s games until becoming independent in the mid-90s.

Nintendo Entertainment System[]

Developer

Developer, JP Publisher

Developer, JP/US Publisher

MSX[]

Developer, JP Publisher

  • Mitsume ga Tooru: The Three-Eyed One Comes Here

Game Boy[]

Developer, JP/US Publisher

Developer

Super NES[]

Developer, JP/US Publisher

Developer, US Publisher

Developer

  • (全日本プロレス)
  • (全日本プロレス’ 世界最強タッグ ダッシュ)
  • Ghost Sweeper Mikami: Joreishi ha Nice Body
  • Mighty Morphin Power Rangers (SNES Version)
  • The Ninja Warriors (SNES)

Sega Master System[]

Developer

Natsume-Atari / Natsume Co., Ltd.[]

Natsume-Atari, formerly Natsume Co., Ltd, has mostly acted as a developer since splitting from Natsume Inc. - although it has also published some games, notably in the Medarot series.

Super NES[]

Developer

Game Boy[]

Game Boy Color[]

Developer

Game Boy Advance[]

Developer

GameCube[]

Publisher

Nintendo DS[]

Developer

Xbox 360[]

Developer

Natsume Inc.[]

These are games published by Natsume Inc. and/or developed by its subsidiary in Japan after becoming independent from Natsume Co., Ltd.

Most of these games were only published by Natsume in North America, although some reached Europe under the Natsume name through distribution deals with European companies, and some digital releases were self-published by Natsume in Europe.

Super NES[]

Publisher

Sega Saturn[]

Publisher

  • Highway 2000
  • Virtual Casino

Nintendo 64[]

Publisher

PlayStation[]

Publisher

NA Publisher

PlayStation 2[]

Publisher

Game Boy[]

Publisher

Game Boy Color[]

Developer/Publisher

Publisher

Game Boy Advance[]

Publisher

GameCube[]

Publisher

Nintendo DS[]

Publisher

iPhone and iPod Touch[]

Developer/Publisher

Developer

PlayStation Portable[]

Publisher

Wii[]

Publisher

PlayStation 3[]

Publisher

Nintendo 3DS[]

Developer

  • Reel Fishing Paradise 3D

Publisher

PlayStation 4[]

Developer

  • Reel Fishing: Road Trip Adventure
  • Godzilla

Publisher

  • Harvest Moon: Mad Dash

Nintendo Switch[]

Developer

  • Reel Fishing: Road Trip Adventure

Publisher

  • Harvest Moon: Mad Dash

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c INC., NATSUME ATARI (December 18, 2017). "ゲーム遊技機開発のナツメアタリ株式会社|ナツメアタリ株式会社". ナツメアタリ株式会社.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 9, 2008. Retrieved May 21, 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ INC., NATSUME ATARI (December 18, 2017). "ゲーム遊技機開発のナツメアタリ株式会社|ナツメアタリ株式会社". ナツメアタリ株式会社.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "NATSUME INC. ANNOUNCES NEW OFFICE OPENING IN JAPAN" (PDF). Natsume.com. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
  5. ^ "サービス終了のお知らせ".
  6. ^ "Harvest Moon And Beyond, What's Next For Natsume?". March 18, 2015.
  7. ^ "Classic game publisher cleans out its closet, makes thousands on eBay". Ars Technica. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
  8. ^ . March 3, 2005 https://web.archive.org/web/20050303080145/http://www.natsume.com/welcome_frameset.html. Archived from the original on March 3, 2005. Missing or empty |title= (help)CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  9. ^ "Fragments of Silicon - Live & Recorded Episodes". www.talkshoe.com.
  10. ^ "WIKIPEDIA: BAD SOURCE OF INFO". CeeCee's Musings. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  11. ^ "[Industry Interviews] Taka Maekawa from Natsume Inc". November 22, 2017.
  12. ^ http://www.natsume.com/news/news_pdffiles/pid_204_May122016_WGReloaded_Announced.pdf
  13. ^ "Touhou Kenbun Roku - The Cutting Room Floor". tcrf.net.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b "Natsume Announce Next Two Harvest Moons, DS and Wii". Gaming Union. May 21, 2009. Archived from the original on May 26, 2009. Retrieved May 25, 2009.
  15. ^ "RETURN TO THE WORLD OF LUFIA THIS FALL WITH NATSUME'S LUFIA: CURSE OF THE SINISTRALS FOR NINTENDO DS" (PDF). natsume.com. Retrieved May 31, 2010.
  16. ^ Natsume Aren't Done With Gabrielle's Ghostly Groove Yet. Siliconera (2013-05-23). Retrieved on 2013-08-23.
  17. ^ Jump up to: a b "IGN: Natsume Reveals E3 Lineup". IGN. May 28, 2009. Archived from the original on June 11, 2009. Retrieved May 28, 2009.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""