Mega Soft
Megasoft (株式会社メガソフト) was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sega. Originally established as Whiteboard (ホワイトボード), it was later renamed Santos (サントス). Santos was acquired by Sega in December 1991 and changed names again. Megasoft was merged into Sega in November 1992 [1] during the production of the two games listed below.
Takeshi Tozu (戸津猛) was the president of Whiteboard/Santos. (He previously headed Sesame Japan and Crux. [2]) He was replaced after the Sega acquisition (apparently by Tokinori Kaneyasu [兼安時紀] from Data East [3]) and apparently started another company called Santos with some previous employees and intellectual property.
Megasoft was located in the same building as Treasure (東京都台東区上野 7 - 9 - 15 根本ビル 4F). [4] [5]
Gai Brain was started by former staff.
Research Methods: Actual mentions, code comparisons, hidden data, interviews, online resources (see Links), shared staff
As Whiteboard
Arcade
- Airwolf (Kyugo) [6]
- Dakko-chan House (Sega)
- Photo Mahjong: Gekisha (Whiteboard)
- Sukeban Janshi Ryuuko (Sega)
Famicom/NES
- Airwolf (sound?) (JP Publisher: Kyugo)
- Programming: C-lab.?
- Space Harrier (JP Publisher: Takara)
- Started out as a game based on Licca-chan, Takara's popular fashion doll
Mark III/Master System
- Alex Kidd: The Lost Stars (JP/US/EU/AU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy)
- Danan: The Jungle Fighter (EU/AU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy)
- Dynamite Dux (EU/AU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy)
- Masters Golf / Great Golf (JP/US/EU/AU Publisher: Sega)
- Megumi Rescue (JP Publisher: Sega)
- Nekkyuu Koushien (JP Publisher: Sega)
- Opa Opa / Fantasy Zone: The Maze (JP/US/EU/AU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy)
- Reggie Jackson Baseball / American Baseball (US/CA/EU/AU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy)
Artist Ano Shimizu has said he worked on Dynamite Dux and Nekkyuu Koushien at Whiteboard. [7] A code comparison between the two revealed shared code in the rest of the games on this list except Alex Kidd and Great Golf. Alex Kidd, Fantasy Zone, Great Golf, Megumi Rescue, and Nekkyuu Koushien contain the same initials, "YM," in the header. [8] Additionally, the standings screen in Great Golf contains the name "KEI M," likely a reference to Whiteboard programmer Kei Maruyama (though the rest of the names appear to be Sega staff). [9] Whiteboard is also named as a third party owed royalties for Danan the Jungle Fighter on a list of Sega games that could be licensed to Atari Corp., as part of a settlement between the two companies over alleged patent infringement by Sega. [10]
Mega Drive/Genesis
- Mahjong Cop Ryuu: Hakurou no Yabou (JP Publisher: Sega)
As Santos
Arcade
- Hammer Away (unreleased) (Sega)
- Went on location test but was cancelled
- Mahjong Quest (Taito)
Game Gear
- Space Harrier (JP/US/EU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy; KR Publisher: Samsung)
- Turns up on a list of Sega games, but there's no other evidence at this time
Mega Drive/Genesis
- Battle Golfer Yui (JP Publisher: Sega)
- Toki: Going Ape Spit / JuJu Densetsu (US/EU/JP Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy; KR Publisher: Samsung)
Neo Geo
- Janshin Densetsu [MVS] (Yubis)
- This was developed around 1991 and dusted off for a 1994 release.
As Megasoft
Mega Drive/Genesis
- Aa Harimanada (JP Publisher: Sega)
- The Super Shinobi II / Shinobi III: Return of the Ninja Master (JP/US/EU Publisher: Sega; BR Publisher: Tec Toy; SK Publisher: Samsung)