Everything about Konami totally explained
( ) is a leading
developer and
publisher of numerous popular and strong-selling toys,
trading cards,
anime,
tokusatsu,
slot machines,
arcade cabinets and
video games. The company was founded in
1969 as a
jukebox rental and repair business in
Osaka,
Japan, by Kagemasa Kōzuki, the still-current
chairman and
chief executive officer. The name "Konami" is a conjunction of the names Kagemasa Kōzuki, Yoshinobu Nakama, Hiro Matsuda, and Shokichi Ishihara, who were partners acquired by Kozuki and the original founders of Konami Industry Co., Ltd in
1973. Konami also can mean "small wave(s)" in the Japanese language. Konami is represented by the
goroawase number "573". "Five" in Japanese is
go, changed to the voiceless form
ko; "7" in Japanese is
nana shortened to
na; "3" in Japanese is
mittsu, shortened to
mi; "573" =
ko-na-mi. This number appears in many Konami
telephone numbers and as a
high score in Konami games like
Dance Dance Revolution as an example; The heavy chart of the song MAX300 (
DDRMAX) has a 573 total combo (counting double steps as two combos), as well as "The legend of MAX" by ZZ which has a total combo of 573. In some other games like, the number is occasionally used as minor self-reference to the company.
Konami is currently headquartered in
Tokyo and additionally operates health and
physical fitness clubs in Japan. Konami also operates United States activities in
El Segundo, California for video games, and
Paradise, Nevada for the gambling industry.
History
On
March 19,
1973, Kozuki transformed the business into Konami Industry Co., Ltd. and began work on manufacturing "amusement machines" for
arcades. Their first actual game machine wasn't created until
1978. They began to achieve success with hit arcade games such as
1981's
Frogger,
Scramble, and
Super Cobra.
Between
1982 and
1985, Konami manufactured and sold game software for home
PCs, producing games for the
MSX and
Nintendo's
Family Computer ("Famicom")
game consoles. This new business was in addition to, not in place of, the arcades, and many hit console games of this time period were ports of the arcade versions. Konami of America Inc. was established in
Torrance,
California in 1982 but moved to
Wood Dale, Illinois in
1984. Also in 1984, Konami expanded to the
United Kingdom and established Konami Limited.
Konami began to achieve great success when the Famicom took off, being released in the United States as the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). Many of the NES/Famicom's bestselling titles were produced by Konami, including
Gradius, the
Castlevania series, the
Contra series, and
Metal Gear. Konami was one of the most active and prolific third party development studios for the NES, which led to conflict with
Nintendo of America's licensing restrictions. During the heyday of the NES, Nintendo of America controlled the production of all licensed NES software titles, and limited third party developers to a maximum of five titles per year. Several companies found a way around this restriction by founding quasi-independent subsidiary corporations, effectively doubling the number of games that they could release during the year. In the case of Konami, this subsidiary was known as
Ultra Games, and a large number of Konami titles were published in North America under their banner, including the original
Metal Gear,
Gyruss,
Skate or Die, the first two
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games and
Snake's Revenge (a Japanese-made
Metal Gear sequel made specifically for the western market). In
Europe, faced with a similar restriction placed by Nintendo's European branch, Konami established
Palcom Software Ltd. to the same end. By the early
1990s, Nintendo of America had relaxed many of its licensing restrictions, and, no longer needed, Ultra was shut down in
1992, with the remainder of its staff being reabsorbed into Konami's official American branch.
In 1992, members of Konami left to form
Treasure Co. Ltd, which, like Konami, is also well known in the video gaming community for creating high caliber shooters and action games.
In 1999, Konami moved its U.S corporate offices from
Buffalo Grove, Illinois to
Redwood City, California. The Buffalo Grove location remained open strictly for the manufacturing of Konami's arcade video games.
In 2003, Konami of America closed down their arcade division due to heavy losses; the entire Buffalo Grove location was shut down along with it. All machine inquiries and new machines will be handled by
Betson Enterprises.
Also in 2003, Konami teamed up with the Japanese film production company,
Toho Company, Ltd. in creating their own
genre of
tokusatsu TV series, known as the
Chōseishin Series, in attempt to emulate and rival the success of
Toei's
Super Sentai genre.
In 2005, Konami became the majority owner of
Hudson Soft. Konami has an office and gaming production facility in
Paradise, Nevada for its
casino gaming equipment subsidiary, Konami Gaming.
(External Link
)
In 2005, Konami was the fourth largest game developer in Japan after
Nintendo Co, Ltd.,
Sega Sammy Holdings, and
Namco Bandai Holdings.
In 2007, Konami Corporation of America moved its U.S head office from Redwood City to Konami Digital Entertainment's office in
El Segundo, California.
Games
Konami has created some of the biggest and most memorable video games over the years. Genre-defining titles attributed to Konami include the vampire-hunting
Castlevania series, the survival horror
Silent Hill series, the action/shooter
Contra series, the platform/adventure
Ganbare Goemon series, the espionage action
Metal Gear series, the console role-playing
Suikoden series, the music-oriented
Bemani series (which includes
Dance Dance Revolution,
Beatmania,
Guitar Freaks,
Drummania, and
pop'n music, among others) and the dating simulation
Tokimeki Memorial series. Konami is particularly notable for its arcade
shoot 'em up games such as
Gradius,
Life Force,
Time Pilot,
Gyruss,
Parodius,
Axelay, and
TwinBee . Konami's games based on cartoon licenses, especially the,
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and
Tiny Toon Adventures series, are still remembered fondly, but other American productions like
The Simpsons,
Bucky O Hare,
G.I. Joe and
The Goonies all have seen release at some point in the past by Konami either on arcades and/or video game consoles . Recent cinematically styled franchises from Konami are the continuing
Silent Hill survival horror game franchise, and the
Metal Gear series, which underwent a public renaissance with
Metal Gear Solid. Another successful franchise is
Winning Eleven, the spiritual sequel to
International Superstar Soccer, which is extremely popular in
Asia,
Latin America,
Middle East and
Europe, where it's sold by the name
Pro Evolution Soccer. And in Japan, it's known for the extremely popular
Jikkyou Power Pro Yakyuu (or Power Pro) baseball series.
Konami is also known for its password,
The Konami Code, which traditionally gives many
powerups in its games. Although variants also exist, as in the
Parodius series, and button naming can differ depending on the controller used, the classic Famicom or NES combination is: Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A, Start.
Many of Konami's titles have received immense critical acclaim. In IGN's list of the 25 greatest Playstation games of all time the top two were both Konami titles (Metal Gear Solid and Castlevania: Symphony of the Night respectively).
Movie production
In 2006, Konami started producing movies based on their popular franchises. Konami produced the
Silent Hill movie (released in 2006) and has announced that that'll produce a
Metal Gear Solid movie and a
Castlevania movie.
Slot machine games
Konami produces a variety of slot machines including:
- Rocky slots (They hold the license for the slot machine rights to the movie franchise.
- Money in the Bank
- Solstice Gold
- African Treasure
- Atlantic Treasure
- Aloha Gold
- Cash Inferno
- Coinopolis
- Big Payoff
- Billionaires
- Lucky dice
Konami structure
In
2005, Konami Corporation merged with six of its subsidiaries.
Konami Corporation
- Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo, Inc.
- Konami Computer Entertainment Japan, Inc.
- Konami Computer Entertainment Studios, Inc.
- Konami Online, Inc.
- Konami Media Entertainment, Inc.
- Konami Traumer, Inc
Konami Sports Life Corporation
Konami Sports Corporation
Konami Corporation of America: Holding company U.S.
- Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc. formerly Konami of America Inc.
Konami Corporation of Europe B.V.: Holding company Europe, formerly Konami Limited
Konami Software Shanghai, Inc.
In 2006, Konami Corporation divided the Japanese video game enterprise at a new subsidiary, Konami Digital Entertainment Co., Ltd. and Konami Corporation shifted to the holding company.
Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo
Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo, (aka KCET, KCE Tokyo, Konami TYO, and Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo Co., Ltd.) is a former subsidiary of Konami Corporation. Konami absorbed KCET along with several of its other subsidiaries in 2005. KCET was a Tokyo-based game developer responsible for many of Konami's most notable franchises, including Winning Eleven, Castlevania, Dance Dance Revolution, Gradius, and Silent Hill.
Konami Computer Entertainment Japan
Konami JPN Ltd., formerly Konami Computer Entertainment Japan (KCEJ), is a video game developer and subsidiary of Konami Corporation, located in Tokyo, Japan.
The development house has worked on titles for a wide variety of platforms, ranging from Game Boy to PlayStation. KCEJ is split into two different development teams, located in two offices in Tokyo. KCEJ East has worked on the PlayStation 2's Reiselied and 7 Blades as well as a number of dating sims for the PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and Game Boy. KCEJ West is known for the best-selling Metal Gear Solid series, and the Beatmania and GuitarFreaks series.
On April 1, 2005, KCEJ (along with KCET and KCES) merged with its parent company. Hideo Kojima (the company's former vice president) has formed his own subsidiary, Kojima Productions.
Logos
Image:Konami 1st logo.png|Konami's First logo used from 1981-July 1986.
Image:Konami_2nd_logo.jpg|Konami's strips logo used from 1986-February 2003.
Image:Konami logo.svg|The current and most recent Konami logo since February 2003.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Konami'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://konami.totallyexplained.com">Konami Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |