Hudson Soft: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
 
(It's unlikely that the transfer of Mario Party to Nd Cube was because of Konami's acquisition; they made Wii Party before Konami announced its acquisition of Hudson, and MP9 likely had development started before Konami's announcement. Plus, Konami developed DDRMM, so they could have retained the Mario Party rights, and MP7, 8 , and DS were made when Konami controlled Hudson. I'm pretty sure that Nd Cube only retained the rights due to the mass influx of developers from Hudson)
 
(146 intermediate revisions by 78 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Hudson is a video game company. There are well-known, especially for the Bomberman series. Hudson has worked with [[Nintendo]] on the [[Mario Party]] series.
{{redirect|Hudson|the actor with the last name "Hudson"|[[Ernie Hudson]]}}
{{company infobox
|logo=Hudson Logo.svg
|founded=May 18, 1973
|defunct=March 1, 2012
|first_release=''[[Donkey Kong 3: Dai Gyakushū]]'' and ''[[Mario Bros. Special]]''
|latest_release=''[[Mario Party DS]]''
}}
[[File:SNES Super Multitap.jpg|thumb|left|Super Multitap]]
'''{{wp|Hudson Soft}}''' was a Japanese video game developer and publisher that had been a subsidiary of [[Konami]] from 2011 until its dissolution in 2012. Hudson was best known for creating the ''{{wp|Bomberman}}'' franchise starring [[Bomberman|the eponymous character]]. Hudson also co-developed the {{wp|TurboGrafx-16|PC Engine and TurboGrafx-16}} consoles with NEC in the late 1980s. Hudson's most notable work for [[Nintendo]] and the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]] is the [[Mario Party (series)|''Mario Party'' series]], of which Hudson developed eight console games and two handheld games. From 2010 until Hudson's dissolution in 2012, most of the ''Mario Party'' staff at Hudson migrated to the Nintendo-owned [[Nintendo Cube|Nd Cube]] (now known as Nintendo Cube) when Hudson's former president Hidetoshi Endo moved there; they then developed ''{{wp|Wii Party}}'', before taking control of the ''Mario Party'' series, staring with ''[[Mario Party 9]]'', which released in 2012.


[http://www.hudsonentertainment.com/?page=faq Hudson's Homepage]
[[File:MP1-3 Hudson logo.png|thumb|left|In-game logo from the first three ''Mario Party'' titles]]
Since April 2005, Konami had been the controlling shareholder of Hudson Soft, and in January 2011, Konami announced that it was to fully acquire the rest of Hudson and make it a subsidiary of Konami, with the acquisition process completing on April 1. On March 1, 2012, Hudson Soft merged with Konami Digital Entertainment, Konami's flagship subsidiary and Hudson's sister company, with the latter ending up as the surviving entity.
 
Hudson's mascot was [[Hachisuke]], a reference to the {{wp|Hudson Hornet}}, a sedan from the 1950s built by the unrelated Hudson Automobile Company. It appears in ''[[Super Mario Bros. Special]]'' as an item that can be collected to earn 8,000 [[point]]s.
 
Hudson Soft also created [[Family BASIC]] and the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System#Super Multitap|Super Multitap]].
 
==''Super Mario'' games developed==
{{multiple image
|align=right
|direction=horizontal
|footer=1985 print ads showing the availability of Hudson Soft ports on home computers.
|image1=Hudson Soft print ad 1.jpg
|width1=200
|image2=Hudson Soft print ad 2.jpg
|width2=200
}}
 
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 50%;text-align:center"
!Title
!Year Released
!Systems
|-
|''[[Donkey Kong 3: Dai Gyakushū]]''
|1984
|Sharp X1, NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-6601
|-
|''[[Mario Bros. Special]]''
|1984
|NEC PC-8001, NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1, NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-6601, FM-7, NEC PC-9801, Sharp MZ-1500, Sharp MZ-2200, Hitachi S1, SMC-777
|-
|''[[Punch Ball Mario Bros.]]''
|1984
|NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1, NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-6601, FM-7, Sharp MZ-1500
|-
|-
|''[[Family BASIC|Family BASIC V3]]''
|1985
|[[Family Computer]]
|-
|''[[Golf]]''
|1985
|NEC PC-8001mkIISR, NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1
|-
|''[[Super Mario Bros. Special]]''
|1986
|NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1, Samsung SPC-1500
|-
|''[[Wario Blast: Featuring Bomberman!]]''
|1994
|[[Game Boy]]
|-
|''[[UNDAKE30 Same Game]]''
|1995
|[[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|Super Famicom]]
|-
|''[[Mario Party]]''
|1998
|[[Nintendo 64]]
|-
|''[[Mario Party 2]]''
|1999
|Nintendo 64
|-
|''[[Mario Party 3]]''
|2000
|Nintendo 64
|-
|''[[Mario Party 4]]''
|2002
|[[Nintendo GameCube]]
|-
|''[[Mario Party 5]]''
|2003
|Nintendo GameCube
|-
|''[[Mario Party 6]]''
|2004
|Nintendo GameCube
|-
|''[[Mario Party Advance]]''
|2005
|[[Game Boy Advance]]
|-
|''[[Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix]]
|2005
|Nintendo GameCube
|-
|''[[Mario Party 7]]''
|2005
|Nintendo GameCube
|-
|''[[Mario Party 8]]''
|2007
|[[Wii]]
|-
|''[[Mario Party DS]]''
|2007
|[[Nintendo DS]]
|}
 
==External links==
{{NIWA|Bulbapedia=1|NWiki=1|StrategyWiki=Category:Hudson Soft|WarsWiki=1}}
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20110724185116/http://hudsonentertainment.com/ Hudson's Homepage as of July 2011]
 
{{Companies}}
[[Category:Developers]]
[[Category:Companies]]
[[it:Hudson Soft]]

Latest revision as of 22:49, November 18, 2024

"Hudson" redirects here. For the actor with the last name "Hudson", see Ernie Hudson.
Hudson Soft
The logo for Hudson Soft
Founded May 18, 1973[?]
Defunct March 1, 2012[?]
First Super Mario game Donkey Kong 3: Dai Gyakushū and Mario Bros. Special
Latest Super Mario game Mario Party DS
Super Multitap
Super Multitap

Hudson Soft was a Japanese video game developer and publisher that had been a subsidiary of Konami from 2011 until its dissolution in 2012. Hudson was best known for creating the Bomberman franchise starring the eponymous character. Hudson also co-developed the PC Engine and TurboGrafx-16 consoles with NEC in the late 1980s. Hudson's most notable work for Nintendo and the Super Mario franchise is the Mario Party series, of which Hudson developed eight console games and two handheld games. From 2010 until Hudson's dissolution in 2012, most of the Mario Party staff at Hudson migrated to the Nintendo-owned Nd Cube (now known as Nintendo Cube) when Hudson's former president Hidetoshi Endo moved there; they then developed Wii Party, before taking control of the Mario Party series, staring with Mario Party 9, which released in 2012.

Hudson logo from the start-up of Mario Party, Mario Party 2 and Mario Party 3
In-game logo from the first three Mario Party titles

Since April 2005, Konami had been the controlling shareholder of Hudson Soft, and in January 2011, Konami announced that it was to fully acquire the rest of Hudson and make it a subsidiary of Konami, with the acquisition process completing on April 1. On March 1, 2012, Hudson Soft merged with Konami Digital Entertainment, Konami's flagship subsidiary and Hudson's sister company, with the latter ending up as the surviving entity.

Hudson's mascot was Hachisuke, a reference to the Hudson Hornet, a sedan from the 1950s built by the unrelated Hudson Automobile Company. It appears in Super Mario Bros. Special as an item that can be collected to earn 8,000 points.

Hudson Soft also created Family BASIC and the Super Multitap.

Super Mario games developed[edit]

1985 print ads showing the availability of Hudson Soft ports on home computers.
1985 print ads showing the availability of Hudson Soft ports on home computers.
1985 print ads showing the availability of Hudson Soft ports on home computers.
Title Year Released Systems
Donkey Kong 3: Dai Gyakushū 1984 Sharp X1, NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-6601
Mario Bros. Special 1984 NEC PC-8001, NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1, NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-6601, FM-7, NEC PC-9801, Sharp MZ-1500, Sharp MZ-2200, Hitachi S1, SMC-777
Punch Ball Mario Bros. 1984 NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1, NEC PC-6001, NEC PC-6601, FM-7, Sharp MZ-1500
Family BASIC V3 1985 Family Computer
Golf 1985 NEC PC-8001mkIISR, NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1
Super Mario Bros. Special 1986 NEC PC-8801, Sharp X1, Samsung SPC-1500
Wario Blast: Featuring Bomberman! 1994 Game Boy
UNDAKE30 Same Game 1995 Super Famicom
Mario Party 1998 Nintendo 64
Mario Party 2 1999 Nintendo 64
Mario Party 3 2000 Nintendo 64
Mario Party 4 2002 Nintendo GameCube
Mario Party 5 2003 Nintendo GameCube
Mario Party 6 2004 Nintendo GameCube
Mario Party Advance 2005 Game Boy Advance
Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix 2005 Nintendo GameCube
Mario Party 7 2005 Nintendo GameCube
Mario Party 8 2007 Wii
Mario Party DS 2007 Nintendo DS

External links[edit]