Aicom
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Aicom was a Japanese video game developer, founded in 1988, possibly by a group that left Jaleco . Despite evidence to support this, the Sammy corporate website lists 1990 as the first year and that it was a subsidiary. It was bought by Sammy Industry in 1992. Their games include ''
The Mafat Conspiracy is a Nintendo Entertainment System video game released in 1990. It is the sequel to '' Golgo 13: Top Secret Episode''. Plot A weapons satellite has been snatched out of orbit, and the world is facing nuclear destruction. Behind this act is a ...
'', '' Totally Rad'' and '' Vice: Project Doom'' on the Nintendo Entertainment System, '' Blaster Master Boy'' for the
Game Boy The is an 8-bit fourth generation handheld game console developed and manufactured by Nintendo. It was first released in Japan on April 21, 1989, in North America later the same year, and in Europe in late 1990. It was designed by the same t ...
and '' Pulstar'' for
Neo Geo Neo Geo is a family of video game hardware developed by SNK. On the market from 1990 to 2004, the brand originated with the release of an arcade system, the Neo Geo MVS and its home console counterpart, the Neo Geo AES. The Neo Geo MVS was ...
. Aicom broke off from Sammy in 1996, and with funding from
SNK is a Japanese video game hardware and software company. It is the successor to the company Shin Nihon Kikaku and presently owns the SNK video game brand and the Neo Geo video game platform. SNK's predecessor Shin Nihon Kikaku was founded in 1978 ...
, became Yumekobo, producing games mainly for SNK systems.


List of Aicom games

This is a list of Aicom games arranged by release date, the order in regions specifies where it was released first. This list does not include Yumekobo label games.


List of Yumekobo games

This is a list of Yumekobo games arranged by release date, the order in regions specifies where it was released first. This list does not include Aicom label games.


References


External links


Aicom
at Game Developer Research Institute {{SNK Defunct video game companies of Japan Video game development companies SNK SNK Playmore