Warp (company)

From Yellow to Orange Inc. (shortened as FYTO; formerly Warp Inc. and Super Warp Inc.) is a Japanese video game developer founded by Kenji Eno in 1994. Eno headed the company until his death in February 2013.

History

From Yellow to Orange was founded under the name Warp in 1994.[1] The Warp logo—four television screens displaying the four letters of the developer's name—was designed by founder Kenji Eno and designer Tomohiro Miyazaki.[2] Warp developed several interactive cinema games, their most successful series being D. In 2000, following the release of D2, Warp changed its name to Super Warp.[1] Super Warp exited the video game industry, widening its scope to network services, DVD products, and online music.[3]

After receiving an investment from the company Neoteny Inc., Super Warp changed its name to From Yellow to Orange (FYTO) in 2001.[1] FYTO proceeded to release the game You, Me, and the Cubes in 2009.[3] Eno headed the company as president and chief executive officer (CEO) until his death February 2013.[3] Following this, Katsutoshi Eguchi became the company's new CEO.[4] Eno's final project, Kakexun, became a collaborative effort between FYTO and Naoya Sato's company Warp2.[4]

Games developed

gollark: Probably.
gollark: I'll try without the function environment meddlings and see.
gollark: The old version literally ran the entire BIOS to put everything in the environment, starting from just FS functions and a whitelisted set of libraries. The new version is attempting to just change the envs of all the functions round, not that that works at all.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: It used to work, but I updated it to be less stupid and now it does not.

References

  1. "Company Profile". From Yellow to Orange.
  2. "CoreGamers Interview with Kenji Eno – III. Bliss". CoreGamers. Archived from the original on 15 September 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  3. McWhertor, Michael (21 February 2013). "Game designer and musician Kenji Eno dies at 42". Polygon.
  4. Corriea, Alexa Ray (19 February 2014). "Kenji Eno's final project being developed posthumously by colleagues". Polygon.
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