Locomotive
From Game Developer Research Institute
Revision as of 19:46, 25 November 2010 by CRV (Talk | contribs) (Reverted edits by 221.130.17.56 (talk) to last revision by CRV)
Locomotive (株式会社ロコモティブ) was a Japanese development house started in May 1987 and headed by Hiroshi Okamoto (岡本博視). [1] It appears to have closed around 2000.
In 2004, Okamoto co-founded Apria, a company that sells organic cosmetics. [2] It is alleged he programmed the infamous Transformers game Convoy no Nazo for the Famicom.
Not to be confused with the defunct THQ-owned Locomotive Games.
Research Methods: Actual mentions, hidden data, shared staff
Famicom/NES
- StarTropics (development cooperation) (US/CA/DE/SC Publisher: Nintendo)
- Zoda's Revenge: StarTropics II (US/CA Publisher: Nintendo)
Nintendo 64
- AeroGauge (JP/EU/US Publisher: ASCII)
- Beast Wars Metals 64 / Transformers: Beast Wars Transmetals (JP Publisher: Takara; US Publisher: BAM! Entertainment)
- Graphics: SunArt
- Choro Q 64 / Penny Racers (JP Publisher: Takara; US Publisher: THQ)
- Choro Q 64 2: Hachamecha Grand Prix Race (JP Publisher: Takara)
Super Famicom/Super NES
- Super Punch-Out (US/UK/FR/DE/SC/AU/JP Publisher: Nintendo)
Virtual Boy
- SD Gundam Dimension War (JP Publisher: Bandai)
- V-Tetris (JP Publisher: Bullet Proof Software)
- Virtual Fishing (JP Publisher: Pack-In-Video)