Difference between revisions of "Technos"
From Video Game Music Preservation Foundation Wiki
(→Music Development) |
|||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
* [[Fumio Suzuki]] | * [[Fumio Suzuki]] | ||
* [[Hiroshi Nishikawa]] | * [[Hiroshi Nishikawa]] | ||
− | |||
* [[Junichi Hagiwara]] | * [[Junichi Hagiwara]] | ||
* [[Kazunaka Yamane]] | * [[Kazunaka Yamane]] | ||
Line 35: | Line 34: | ||
* [[Kennosuke Suemura]] | * [[Kennosuke Suemura]] | ||
* [[Kiyomi Kataoka]] | * [[Kiyomi Kataoka]] | ||
+ | * [[Makoto Iida]] | ||
* [[Michiya Hirasawa]] | * [[Michiya Hirasawa]] | ||
* [[Naoki Goto]] | * [[Naoki Goto]] |
Revision as of 07:54, 29 May 2021
Technōs Japan Corp. | |
Founded | 1981 |
Closed | 1996 |
Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan |
Other Names |
|
Technōs Japan Corp. was a Japanese video game developer, best known for the Double Dragon Franchises and Kunio-kun (which includes Renegade, Super Dodge Ball and River City Ransom). There was a US subsidiary also, which is called American Technōs Inc.
Games
Music Development
NES
Michiya Hirasawa programmed a sound driver that was used in all of the company's games. The music was written in Music Macro Language, according to Norihiko Togashi. While he never worked for Technos, he did use Hirasawa's driver for the only two Famicom titles he worked on.
SNES
Technos, at first used their own version of the Kankichi-kun driver. Robert C. Ashworth revised their own driver for Super Double Dragon (SNES) and later became the basis for their own driver SDCLINK.
Audio Personnel
- Akira Inoue
- Chiaki Iizuka
- Fumio Suzuki
- Hiroshi Nishikawa
- Junichi Hagiwara
- Kazunaka Yamane
- Kazuo Sawa
- Kenichi Mori
- Kennosuke Suemura
- Kiyomi Kataoka
- Makoto Iida
- Michiya Hirasawa
- Naoki Goto
- Reiko Uehara
- Robert C. Ashworth
- Satoshi Urakawa
- Shintaro Kumagai
- Tadashi Takatsuka
- Takaro Nozaki
- Taku Urabe
- Teruo Nakano
- Yoshihiro Kameoka