Bandai Namco Entertainment

Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc.
Native name
株式会社バンダイナムコゲームス
Kabushiki gaisha Bandai Namuko Entāteinmento
Formerly called
Nakamura Manufacturing (1955–1977)
Namco Limited
(1977–2006)

Namco Bandai Games
(2006–2014)

Bandai Namco Games
(2014–2015)
Kabushiki gaisha
Subsidiary
Industry Video game industry
Anime
Motion pictures
Predecessor Namco
Founded June 1, 1955 (1955-06-01) [1]
Founders Masaya Nakamura
Headquarters Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan
Key people
Satoshi Oshita
(President and CEO)
Products List of Bandai Namco video games
Number of employees
Bandai Namco Games
900 (as of April 2017)[1]
Bandai Namco Studios
1047 (as of April 2012)[2]
Parent Bandai Namco Holdings
Divisions Business Promotion Unit
Business Management Unit
Subsidiaries See list
Website www.bandainamcoent.com

Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. (BNEI) (株式会社バンダイナムコエンターテインメント, Kabushiki gaisha Bandai Namuko Entāteinmento) is an arcade, mobile and home video game publisher, based in Japan. The company also publishes video, music and other entertainment products related to its video game IPs.

Bandai Namco Entertainment is a wholly owned subsidiary of Bandai Namco Holdings (BNHD) and specializes in management and sales of video games and other related entertainment products, while its Bandai Namco Studios subsidiaries specialize in the development of these products. It is the core company of Bandai Namco Group's Content Strategic Business Unit (Content SBU).[3]

Bandai Namco Entertainment is the result of a merger in March 2006 between the video game development divisions of Bandai and Namco, in which the former's video game division was absorbed into the latter's. Originally referred to as Namco Bandai Games, the company was renamed as Bandai Namco Games in January 2014.[4] In April 2015, Bandai Namco Holdings changed its gaming division name from Bandai Namco Games to Bandai Namco Entertainment.

In addition to its core publisher operations in Japan, Bandai Namco Entertainment publishes content worldwide through different entities. Bandai Namco Games America handles publishing across North America; Bandai Namco Games Europe handles publishing across Europe; Bandai Namco Games Asia handles publishing across Asia (except Japan); Bandai Namco Games Australia and Bandai Namco Games New Zealand handle publishing in Oceania. The company has its headquarters in Shinagawa, Tokyo.[1]

History

In early 2005, Namco Ltd. and Bandai Co. Ltd. announced plans to combine their operations. [5] The merger took effect on September 29 of that same year. For the first six months, both companies stayed intact under the umbrella of the newly created Bandai Namco Holdings .

On March 31, 2006, the video games division of Bandai was merged into Namco which in turn became Namco Bandai Games. [6][7] Namco Hometek and Bandai Games had already merged on January 2, 2006 to form Namco Bandai Games America in the United States.[8][9]

On April 1, 2008, Banpresto's video game operations were absorbed by Namco Bandai Games.[10] On April 1, 2009, Bandai Networks, Namco Bandai's mobile phone business, was dissolved and absorbed into Namco Bandai Games.[11]

In 2010, Namco Bandai Games entered the Guinness World Records for being the company that released the most TV commercials for the same product, a Nintendo DS game called Solatorobo: Red the Hunter. They created 100 versions of the ad as the game consists of 100 chapters.[12]

In early 2011, Namco Networks was absorbed to Namco Bandai Games America, effectively consolidating Namco Bandai's American console, handheld and mobile video game development operations.[13]

On April 2, 2012, Namco Bandai Games spun off its development operations into a new company called Namco Bandai Studios. The new company was spurred by Namco Bandai's interest in faster development times and tighter cohesion between disparate development teams. It will comprise approximately 1,000 employees, who are already part of Namco Bandai.[14]

In March 2013, Namco Bandai Games established two new game studios. The first, Namco Bandai Studios Singapore, will be Namco Bandai's "leading development center" in Asia and develop game content for the Asia Pacific. The second studio, Namco Bandai Studios Vancouver, will work on online social games and game content development for North America and Europe, and will be established within The Center for Digital Media (CDM).[15] In July 2013, Namco Bandai Partners (NBP), which used to oversee the PAL distribution network since September 2012, merged with Namco Bandai Games Europe (NBGE) in order to push distribution and publishing into one entity, Namco Bandai Games Europe (NBGE).[16]

On January 25, 2014, Namco Bandai Games and Namco Bandai Studios announced that the companies would be known as Bandai Namco Games and Bandai Namco Studios worldwide, respectively. The change is intended to unify the brand internationally in order to increase the "value" and "appeal" of the name.[4] In December 2014, the company announced in a press release that the full company name will be changed to Bandai Namco Entertainment on April 1, 2015.[17]

Organization

Branches

Bandai Namco Entertainment (BNEI), plays the role of expanding the content business, while Bandai Namco Studios (BNSI) plays the role of creating content. Both companies cooperate to provide products and services around the world.

Bandai Namco Entertainment

Logo for Bandai Namco Games

Bandai Namco Entertainment (BNEI) is a core company of the Content Strategic Business Unit (Content SBU) of Bandai Namco, and is responsible for all aspects of Bandai Namco Group’s content business, from creation to sales. However, Bandai Namco Entertainment spun off its video games and related entertainment development to Bandai Namco Studios in April 2012. As such, Bandai Namco Entertainment is currently responsible for managing, publishing, and marketing of already developed content, not only from Bandai Namco Studios but from third-party developers as well.[14]

In addition to its core publisher operations in Japan, Bandai Namco Entertainment publishes content worldwide through different entities. Bandai Namco Entertainment America manages operations and handles publishing across North America and oversees operations of Bandai Namco Entertainment Brazil, which operates and handles publishing in Brazil. Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe manages and oversees operations and handles publishing across EMEA, and has branches in France, Italy, Greece, Romania, the Nordic countries, Portugal, Spain, Germany, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Bandai Namco Entertainment Asia manages and oversees operations and handles publishing across Asia (except Japan), and has branches in Malaysia, Singapore, Korea, Philippines, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

Bandai Namco Studios

Bandai Namco Studios

Bandai Namco Studios (BNSI) functions as the core video game development studio of Bandai Namco Entertainment. In addition to its video game development operations, Bandai Namco Studios also work on other entertainment content such as video and music, related to its video game IPs.

In addition to its core development studio in Tokyo, Japan, Bandai Namco Studios has development operations in Singapore, which develops game content for the Asia Pacific, and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (established within The Center for Digital Media), which develops online social games for North America and Europe.[15]

Key people

Structure

Surge label

At the end of 2008, just prior to the release of Afro Samurai, Namco Bandai Entertainment announced the Surge publishing label.[19] The new label was an attempt at creating a separate identity for the company, aimed at a Western audience desiring more mature themes in game content, such as Naruto Uzumaki chronicles [20] Following Afro, early press materials indicated that Dead to Rights: Retribution and Splatterhouse would also be released under the Surge label, but neither game ultimately did; both were released with a retro Namco label instead to reflect the series' legacy. As of 2010, Afro is still the only game to have been released as a Surge title in North America, as the European and Japanese versions of Afro Samurai are branded with the Namco label instead. Surge also announced that they would publish 2 Days to Vegas by Steel Monkeys; however, the game was never released and is presumed to be cancelled.

Games

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Corporate Overview". Bandai Namco Games. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
  2. "About". Bandai Namco Studios. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  3. "Strategic Business Units". Bandai Namco. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  4. 1 2 Goldfarb, Andrew. "Namco Bandai Changing Name to Bandai Namco". IGN. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  5. Feldman, Curt. "Bandai, Namco to merge". GameSpot. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  6. "株式会社バンダイナムコホールディングス 2005年度事業報告書" (PDF). Bandai Namco Holdings. 2006. Retrieved August 6, 2017.
  7. Karlin, David. "Bandai and Namco Finalize Merger Details". 1UP.com. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  8. Adams, David. "Namco, Bandai Complete North American Merger". IGN. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  9. "Namco and Bandai complete merger in North America". GameSpy. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  10. "Banpresto absorbed by Namco Bandai". Siliconera. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  11. KatanaXtreme.com – Namco Bandai Games Inc. to Take Over Bandai Networks Co., Ltd.
  12. "Most TV commercials for the same product (8 hrs) – regional/Free-to-air". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  13. "Namco Bandai Games America/Namco Networks merger". Games Industry International. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  14. 1 2 Gilbert, Ben. "Namco spins off internal dev studios into 'Namco Bandai Studio'". Joystiq. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  15. 1 2 Romano, Sal. "Namco Bandai opening Singapore and Vancouver studios". Gematsu. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  16. Long, Niel. "Namco Bandai completes merger of publishing and distribution businesses". EDGE. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  17. 2014-12-16, Bandai Namco Games changing name to Bandai Namco Entertainment, Gematsu
  18. "Organizational Chart". Bandai Namco Entertainment. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  19. McWhertor, Michael. "Namco Bandai Needs Westerners, Plans "Surge"". Kotaku.
  20. Sheffield, Brandon. "Q&A: Namco Bandai's Iwai Talks Tricky Topics In Western Markets". Gamasutra.
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