Difference between revisions of "GTE Interactive Media"
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< [[Companies]] | < [[Companies]] | ||
[[Image:Gtiglogo.gif|right|244px|GTE Entertainment logo]] | [[Image:Gtiglogo.gif|right|244px|GTE Entertainment logo]] | ||
− | Started in 1990 [http://articles.latimes.com/1997-01-27/business/fi-22642_1_interactive-multimedia], '''GTE Interactive Media''' was a Carlsbad, California-based division of GTE Vantage, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the telecom GTE Corporation. Products were published under the GTE Entertainment label. [http://web.archive.org/web/ | + | Started in 1990 [http://articles.latimes.com/1997-01-27/business/fi-22642_1_interactive-multimedia], '''GTE Interactive Media''' was a Carlsbad, California-based division of GTE Vantage, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the telecom GTE Corporation. Products were published under the GTE Entertainment label. [http://web.archive.org/web/19970626193531/http://www.im.gte.com/gtec/gthhist.html] Prior to being renamed in 1994, GTE Interactive Media was known as '''GTE ImagiTrek''' and was primarily a research and development operation, also performing contract work for other product developers under non-disclosure agreements. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb5247/is_n25_v15/ai_n28646216/] GTE-IM shut down on March 14, 1997. [http://articles.latimes.com/1997-01-27/business/fi-22642_1_interactive-multimedia] |
In addition to the games listed below, GTE-IM developed and published educational software and other interactive multimedia products. | In addition to the games listed below, GTE-IM developed and published educational software and other interactive multimedia products. |
Revision as of 02:54, 2 May 2015
Started in 1990 [1], GTE Interactive Media was a Carlsbad, California-based division of GTE Vantage, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the telecom GTE Corporation. Products were published under the GTE Entertainment label. [2] Prior to being renamed in 1994, GTE Interactive Media was known as GTE ImagiTrek and was primarily a research and development operation, also performing contract work for other product developers under non-disclosure agreements. [3] GTE-IM shut down on March 14, 1997. [4]
In addition to the games listed below, GTE-IM developed and published educational software and other interactive multimedia products.
Optic Moon appears to have been a GTE ImagiTrek label. [5]
Research Methods: Actual mentions, online resources, shared credits
3DO
- Jammit (US Publisher: GTE Entertainment)
Arcade
- Time Traveler (Sega) [6]
DOS
- Jammit (US Publisher: GTE Entertainment)
- NCAA Championship Basketball (US Publisher: GTE Entertainment)
- Online Programming Conversion: Junglevision Software [7]
Macintosh
- Timelapse (US Publisher: Hammerhead Entertainment)
- Additional Development ("helped complete" [8]): Cyberflix
Mega CD/Sega CD
- Hammer vs. Evil D. in Soulfire (unreleased) (Sega)
Mega Drive/Genesis
- Jammit (US Publisher: Virgin Games)
Super Famicom/Super NES
- Jammit (US Publisher: GTE Entertainment)
- Street Hockey '95 (US Publisher: GTE Entertainment)
Windows
- Timelapse (US Publisher: GTE Entertainment; DE Publisher: Philips Interactive Media)
- Additional Development ("helped complete" [9]): Cyberflix