Imagineer

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Imagineer Co., Ltd (イマジニア株式会社, Imajinia kabushiki gaisha) is a Japanese video game developer and publisher, and the primary stakeholder of the Medarot franchise. Notable productions include co-developing the hardware of the Famicom Disk System Disk Fax device, the Japanese releases of various popular western home computer games, the Nintendo 64 RPG [[Quest 64 and the Fitness Boxing series.

The company was founded as a subsidiary of holding company Misawa Homes in 1986 with the purpose of researching the use of computer imagery in housing plans and school software. The company soon spun off and shifted focus toward consumer game development, with a stated focus of games designed for adult audiences.

History

Imagineer held meetings with publisher Kodansha on creating a multimedia franchise, with a vague idea of having it center around robots[1]. Mangaka Rin Horuma (who had recently published a special in the summer issue of Kodansha's Comic BomBom magazine) was eventually brought onto the project. His ideas served as the basis of the final form of Medarot. Development of the Medarot games was outsourced to Natsume.

Following the release of Medarot 4, Imagineer decided to step away from the packaged game market in favour of mobile software and staff that advocated for continued development of Medarot left one after the other[1]. As Natsume remained interested in continuing the series, the primary direction of the franchise was handed over to them, although Imagineer would retained publishing and licensing rights. After Natsume itself discontinued further development on Medarot after the release of Medarot Brave, Imagineer announced its return to Medarot game development with the release of Shingata Medarot using its packaged game subsidiary Rocket Company, but the game proved to be a financial failure.

In 2009, Imagineer announced plans to restart Medarot and released Medarot DS in 2010, developed by its new subsidiary Delta Arts. Most Medarot titles since then have been developed internally at Imagineer.


Subsidiaries

Rocket Company

Delta Arts

SoWhat

Notable employees

References