Bandai Namco Holdings: Difference between revisions
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|''[[Donkey Konga 2]]'' | |''[[Donkey Konga 2]]'' |
Revision as of 01:08, May 18, 2024
Bandai Namco Holdings | |
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Founded | Bandai: July 5, 1950 Namco: June 1, 1955 Bandai Namco Entertainment: March 31, 2006 |
First Super Mario game | Donkey Konga |
Latest Super Mario game | Mario Kart Tour |
Current president | Nao Udagawa |
Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. (formerly capitalized as BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment Inc.), previously called Namco Bandai Games Inc. (capitalized as NAMCO BANDAI Games Inc.) and Bandai Namco Games Inc. (capitalized as BANDAI NAMCO Games Inc.), is a publisher that was created when Bandai's video game division was merged into Namco in 2006. On April 1, 2015, the company changed its name to Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. and on April 1, 2018, its arcade division became part of Bandai Namco Amusement Inc. (formerly capitalized as BANDAI NAMCO Amusement Inc.).[1] As a subsidiary of the entertainment conglomerate Bandai Namco Holdings, Bandai Namco Entertainment is in charge of managing, publishing, and marketing content, while Bandai Namco Studios serves as the company's main game development studio. They have developed several Mario games for Nintendo in the past. Bandai Namco Entertainment has created several successful franchises, including Tekken, Pac-Man, Galaxian, Ace Combat, and Tales. In addition to this, Bandai has made Mario-related toys and continues to exist as its own company, part of the Bandai Namco group.
The first Mario game developed by Namco was Mario Superstar Baseball for the Nintendo GameCube. After it became Bandai Namco, it later developed the game's follow-up for the Wii, Mario Super Sluggers. The company produced an arcade crossover Mario Kart, which came to be known as Mario Kart Arcade GP, as well as three sequels, Mario Kart Arcade GP 2, Mario Kart Arcade GP DX, and Mario Kart Arcade GP VR. These arcade Mario Kart games have featured playable appearances of Pac-Man characters, as well as the Tamagotchi Mametchi and Don-chan from the Taiko no Tatsujin series. In addition, it also worked with Capcom to sell Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher.[2][3] The company also assisted in Mario Kart 8 and Mario Kart Tour's development, the former of which features a Mii Racing Suit based on Pac-Man. They are the primary developers for Mario Sports Superstars, with Camelot Software Planning co-developing for the tennis and golf segments of the game. Bandai Namco ended tech support for Korokoro Catcher on April 1, 2013,[4] then ended support for its first two Arcade GP games in June 2015.[5]
Bandai Namco co-developed Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate with Sora Ltd. Their own character, Pac-Man, is featured as a playable fighter in those games, with various Namco characters appearing in one of his taunts, and the ghosts Blinky, Inky, Pinky, and Clyde appearing as an Assist Trophy. Heihachi Mishima from the Tekken series and Lloyd Irving from Tales of Symphonia are the basis for downloadable costumes for Mii Fighters. Additionally, the Tekken character Kazuya Mishima is playable in Super Smash Bros. Utimate as DLC.
Bandai Namco Holdings owns Banpresto, the publisher of the Japan-only arcade games Mario Undōkai, Būbū Mario, and Super Mario Attack, as well as Tamashii Nations, producers of S.H. Figuarts.
Super Mario games
Title | Year released | Console |
---|---|---|
Donkey Konga | 2003 | Nintendo GameCube |
Donkey Kong/Donkey Kong Jr./Mario Bros. | 2004 | Arcade |
Donkey Konga 2 | 2004 | Nintendo GameCube |
Donkey Konga 3 JP | 2005 | Nintendo GameCube |
Mario Superstar Baseball | 2005 | Nintendo GameCube |
Mario Kart Arcade GP | 2005 | Arcade |
Mario Kart Arcade GP 2 | 2007 | Arcade |
Mario Super Sluggers | 2008 | Wii |
Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher | 2009 | Arcade |
Mario Kart Arcade GP DX | 2013 | Arcade |
Mario Kart 8 | 2014 | Wii U |
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS | 2014 | Nintendo 3DS |
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U | 2014 | Wii U |
Mario Sports Superstars | 2017 | Nintendo 3DS |
Mario Kart 8 Deluxe | 2017 | Nintendo Switch |
Mario Kart Arcade GP VR | 2017 | Arcade |
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate | 2018 | Nintendo Switch |
Mario Kart Tour | 2019 | Mobile |
Super Mario toys
A set of figurines from Super Mario Kart
Super balls containing item figurines from Super Mario Galaxy
Keychain of a Light Block from New Super Mario Bros. Wii
Super Mario Land finger puppets
Template:More images A set of ten finger puppets produced by Bandai in 1989.
A finger puppet of Mario from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of King Totomesu from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of a Pionpi from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of Daisy from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of a Goombo from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of a Gunion from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of Hiyoihoi from Super Mario Land
A finger puppet of a Piranha Plant from Super Mario Land
Super Mario trading cards
Super Mario RPG 1996 Bandai trading cards
Package for Super Mario RPG "Scrash" off cards
Gallery
External links
- Official website (Bandai Namco Entertainment, corporate profile)
- Official website (Bandai Namco Entertainment, consumer software)
- Official website (Bandai Namco Amusement)
- Official website (Bandai)
References
- ^ "Notice Regarding Reorganization of Subsidiaries". Bandai Namco.
- ^ "バンダイナムコゲームスとカプコン、開発・販売を協業開始 ~第1弾は中型メダルゲーム機「マリオパーティ ふしぎのコロコロキャッチャー」~". Capcom.
- ^ Capcom and NAMCO BANDAI Games Begin of Medal-winning Game Machines -Starting with the "Mario Party – Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher" midsize medal-winning machine. Capcom.
- ^ "「マリオパーティーふしぎのコロコロキャッチャー」メンテナンス窓口変更のご案内(再掲)". Bandai Namco.
- ^ "『弊社商品の保守対応終了について』". Bandai Namco.