Difference between revisions of "Coreland"
From Game Developer Research Institute
(12 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
− | + | Originally founded by Yasushi Matsuda (松田規義) in April 1977 as Hoei Sangyo (豊栄産業株式会社; better known as Hoei), the company's name was changed to '''Coreland Technology''' (コアランドテクノロジー株式会社) in June 1982. In February 1989, Coreland became a subsidiary of Bandai and was renamed Banpresto. [http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/バンプレスト] | |
− | + | Coreland absorbed Norio Yasuda (安田則雄)'s Technostar (テクノスター) in 1988. [http://www.ampress.co.jp/backnumber/bn2008.06.15.htm] | |
− | + | ||
− | + | '''[[About:Research Methods|Research Methods]]:''' Actual mentions, online resources (see [[#Links|Links]]) | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | |||
− | |||
===Arcade=== | ===Arcade=== | ||
*''119'' (unreleased?) (Sega) | *''119'' (unreleased?) (Sega) | ||
*''4-D Warriors'' (Sega) | *''4-D Warriors'' (Sega) | ||
*''Black Panther'' (Konami) | *''Black Panther'' (Konami) | ||
+ | *''Brain'' (Sega) | ||
*''Cyber Tank'' (Coreland) | *''Cyber Tank'' (Coreland) | ||
*''Gardia'' (Sega) | *''Gardia'' (Sega) | ||
*''Gonbee no I'm Sorry / I'm Sorry'' (Sega) | *''Gonbee no I'm Sorry / I'm Sorry'' (Sega) | ||
+ | *<div style="color:red">''Jump Bug''</div> | ||
*''Noboranka / Zippy Bug'' (Data East) | *''Noboranka / Zippy Bug'' (Data East) | ||
*''Pengo'' (Sega) | *''Pengo'' (Sega) | ||
Line 28: | Line 20: | ||
*''Seishun Scandal / My Hero'' (Sega) | *''Seishun Scandal / My Hero'' (Sega) | ||
*''Senryaku Game Bopeep'' (unreleased) (Sega) | *''Senryaku Game Bopeep'' (unreleased) (Sega) | ||
+ | *''Serizawa Hachidan no Tsume Shogi Oushou'' (Sega) [https://twitter.com/gdri/status/1349820854981566465] | ||
+ | *<div style="color:red">''Super Cross II'' (GM Shoji)</div> | ||
*''SWAT'' (Sega) | *''SWAT'' (Sega) | ||
+ | *<div style="color:red">''Tadaima Tokkunchuu''</div> | ||
*''Tougyuu, The / Bullfight'' (Sega) | *''Tougyuu, The / Bullfight'' (Sega) | ||
*''WEC Le Mans 24'' (Konami) | *''WEC Le Mans 24'' (Konami) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Links== | ||
+ | *[http://members.jcom.home.ne.jp/g-tan/coaland/glist.htm Coreland Game List] (Japanese) | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Companies]] |
Latest revision as of 21:00, 14 January 2021
Originally founded by Yasushi Matsuda (松田規義) in April 1977 as Hoei Sangyo (豊栄産業株式会社; better known as Hoei), the company's name was changed to Coreland Technology (コアランドテクノロジー株式会社) in June 1982. In February 1989, Coreland became a subsidiary of Bandai and was renamed Banpresto. [1]
Coreland absorbed Norio Yasuda (安田則雄)'s Technostar (テクノスター) in 1988. [2]
Research Methods: Actual mentions, online resources (see Links)
Arcade
- 119 (unreleased?) (Sega)
- 4-D Warriors (Sega)
- Black Panther (Konami)
- Brain (Sega)
- Cyber Tank (Coreland)
- Gardia (Sega)
- Gonbee no I'm Sorry / I'm Sorry (Sega)
- Jump Bug
- Noboranka / Zippy Bug (Data East)
- Pengo (Sega)
- Rafflesia (Sega)
- Seishun Scandal / My Hero (Sega)
- Senryaku Game Bopeep (unreleased) (Sega)
- Serizawa Hachidan no Tsume Shogi Oushou (Sega) [3]
- Super Cross II (GM Shoji)
- SWAT (Sega)
- Tadaima Tokkunchuu
- Tougyuu, The / Bullfight (Sega)
- WEC Le Mans 24 (Konami)
Links
- Coreland Game List (Japanese)