Nihon Bussan

From Moegirlpedia
Revision as of 15:42, 24 October 2023 by LiaMinina (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Welcome participation}} {{Company Infobox |image = Nichibutsu-Logo.jpg |company name = Nihon Bussan<br>Nichibutsu<br>SPHINX |founded = March 1970 |industry = Jukebox rental...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
大萌字.svg
Moegirlpedia would welcome your assistance in improving this article☆Kira~

As you read this article, you're welcome to participate in editing this page. Before editing, please read the wiki quickstart, editing guidelines and retrieve relevant information.

We wish you a good time on Moegirlpedia.
Nihon Bussan
Nichibutsu-Logo.jpg
Company name Nihon Bussan
Nichibutsu
SPHINX
Founded March 1970
Headquarters Kita-ku, Osaka, Japan
Related Companies Nichibutsu U.S.A., Nichibutsu U.K., Nichibutsu Europe,

Nihon Bussan is a Japanese game company. Nichibutsu is a brand of Nihon Bussan, SPHINX is an adult game brand of Nihon Bussan, with offices in Tenjinbashi, Kita-ku, Osaka. In 2009, the company ended its operations.

The company's slogan was Frontier Spirit of Amusement.

Introduction

In October 1970, Torii founded Nihon Bussan at the age of 23 in Osaka, however, the name has since been used for their home console games, so the Nichibutsu name is used for arcades. This is similar to Namco's use of "Namco" for arcade games and "Namcot" for home console games, respectively, back in the day. In 1978, when Taito's game Space Invaders swept the market, Nihon Bussan was also involved in the production of arcade games, and in 1978~1979, they published their first arcade game: Moon Base / Moon Alien.

Moon Base was a bootleg version of Space Invaders, as a result, they were sued by Taito. And Moon Alien was a pirated version of Bomb Bee, and Namco sued them as well. At the time, the market was flooded with Space Invaders clones, even famous companies like Namco, Irem and Konami weren't the exception. Nihon Bussan learned from the lawsuits their two works received, subsequently, they stopped following trends blindly. The team of producers headed by Shigeki Fujiwara was not satisfied with the old-fashioned, one-dimensional world of shoot'em ups, instead, they reached out to a wider world, seeking greater space for development. In 1980, Nihon Bussan released two arcade games back-to-back, immediately pushing the developer into the forefront ranks of the arcade industry. These were Moon Creata and Crazy Climber. The first introduced the concept of triple-engine combinations and firepower enhancements based on Space Invaders, arguably the founder of the "power-up" system that later became the soul of traditional 2D shoot'em ups, the latter was extremely creative in using two joysticks to control the left and right hands to accomplish the climbing maneuver. In one fell swoop, it broke the arcade's traditional inherent "joystick + buttons" area.