Yonezawa PR21
Yonezawa PR21 (ヨネザワPR21) (also known as Party Room 21) released Family Computer and Super Famicom video games during the 1990s.[1][2] They also published a game for the Game Boy.[1]
Yonezawa PR21 logo (on a Famicom video game) | |
Industry | Service |
---|---|
Fate | Defunct |
Successor | Sega Yonezawa Sega Toys |
Founded | 1988 |
Defunct | 1998 |
Area served | Japan |
Products | Video games |
Most of the games produced were of the board game/trivia genres. Their most "notable" titles during their years of production were the Famicom game Battle Storm and the Super Famicom game Super Hockey '94.
During the 1994 fiscal year, the company published a range of software for the Family Computer before Yonezawa was bought by Sega. After the buyout, the company changed name to Sega Yonezawa, which it was known as until it was merged into Sega Toys in 1998.
Video games
- Battle Storm (1991)
- Gimme a Break: Shijou Saikyou no Quiz Ou Ketteisen (1991)
- Hiden Inyou Kikouhou: Ca Da (1991)
- Gimme a Break: Shijou Saikyou no Quiz Ou Ketteisen 2 (1992)
- Shijou Saikyou no Quiz Ou Ketteisen Super (1992)
- Casino Derby & Super Bingo (1993)
- The Gorilla Man (1993)
- Super Hockey '94 (1994)
gollark: The great thing about having only two data points is that you can easily make models which predict your data perfectly.
gollark: Looks perfectly consistent to me!
gollark: See, THIS is on my 404 page and rotates utterly, as well as changing color.
gollark: I think you can do better with CSS animations.
gollark: There are better systems for electing representatives than the extremely terrible first-past-the-post one in use, but nobody is using those. I don't trust people enough to expect direct democracy to produce remotely favourable outcomes. But the politicians who get elected are also quite bad, so who knows.
References
- "Yonezawa PR21 information (first reference)". GameFAQs. Retrieved 2011-04-07.
- "Yonezawa PR21 information (second reference)". Play Right. Retrieved 2011-04-07.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.