Noise (Marigul)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Noise (Marigul) | |
Type | privately held |
---|---|
Founded | September 2, 1996 |
Headquarters | Tokyo, Japan |
Key people | Kouji Kenjou, game designer |
Industry | Computer and video game industry |
Products | Games for Nintendo video game consoles |
Employees | 21 |
Website | http://www.noise-games.com/ |
Noise (Marigul) is a video game development company who works as a second-party developer for Nintendo. The company was founded with a staff of 10 people in September 2, 1996 for the original purpose of developing games for PCs. A short time after, Noise (Marigul) became a part of Marigul Management, Inc., a company created by Nintendo and the Japanese telecommunications company Recruit for the purpose of enlisting smaller developers to make original games for the Nintendo 64.
The company’s first commercially published game, Custom Robo for the Nintendo 64, was released in Japan on December 9, 1999 and became a commercial success in Japan, prompting Nintendo to formally induct Noise (Marigul) as an official second-party developer.
Their second released title was Custom Robo V2, was released in November 10, 2000 and was also met with commercial success in Japan. They also released their first portable video game for the Game Boy Advance, Custom Robo GX, on July 26, 2002.
Despite the impressive sales of the previous games in the Custom Robo franchise, the series’ first localized appearance in North America was with Custom Robo Battle Revolution for the GameCube, released in the Spring of 2004. However, with the declining popularity of the GameCube in all regions and the mediocre reviews the game received, it became the lowest selling – and least popular - game in the franchise.
Noise (Marigul) is currently underway with Custom Robo Arena, an upcoming Nintendo DS title.
Contents |
[edit] Games
[edit] Nintendo 64
- Custom Robo (Japan only)
- Custom Robo V2 (Japan only)
[edit] Game Boy Advance
- Custom Robo GX (Japan only)
[edit] GameCube
[edit] Nintendo DS
[edit] External links
First-party |
---|
Brownie Brown • Intelligent Systems • EAD • EAD Tokyo • Integrated R&D • R&D 1 • R&D 2 • NST • Retro Studios |
Second-party |
AlphaDream • Ambrella • Camelot • Fuse Games • Game Freak • Genius Sonority • HAL Laboratory • NDCUBE • Nexon • Noise • Saru Brunei • skip Ltd. |