Atlus
Native name | 株式会社アトラス |
---|---|
Romanized name | Kabushiki gaisha Atorasu |
Type | Kabushiki gaisha Subsidiary |
Industry | Video game industry |
Founded |
|
Headquarters | Setagaya, Tokyo Japan |
Key people | Akira Nomoto (president) |
Products | List of Atlus games |
Number of employees | 270[1] (October 2018) |
Parent | Sega |
Divisions |
|
Website | atlus.co.jp |
Atlus Co., Ltd. (株式会社アトラス, Kabushiki gaisha Atorasu) is a Japanese video game developer, publisher and distribution company based in Tokyo, and a subsidiary of Sega. It is best known for developing the Megami Tensei, Persona, Etrian Odyssey and Trauma Center series. Its corporate mascot is Jack Frost, a snowman-like enemy from their Shin Megami Tensei series.
Atlus was established in April 1986, and existed until the company was dissolved in October 2010 by Index Holdings. After the dissolution, the name Atlus continued as a brand used by Index Corporation for video game publishing until 2013. Atlus in its current incarnation was founded as Sega Dream Corporation in September 2013, a new shell corporation established by Sega. In November 2013, Sega Dream was renamed Index Corporation, following the bankruptcy of the original Index Corporation. In April 2014, Sega implemented a corporate spin-off in which the contents and solution businesses of Index were spun off as Index Corporation, while the rest of Index Corporation (formerly Sega Dream) was renamed Atlus.
The company has two internal divisions, P-Studio, responsible for managing the Persona series, and Studio Zero, which was established in 2016 by many former members of P-Studio.[2][3] A North American branch of the company, Atlus USA was founded in 1991 in order to focus on publishing and localizing games for North America. Until 2017, Atlus did not have an office for publishing in PAL regions, resulting in the company partnering with multiple third-party publishers instead, such as Ghostlight, NIS America, Square Enix, and Deep Silver.
Contents
1 History
2 Atlus USA
3 European and Oceania distribution
4 Corporate mascot
5 Media based on Atlus games
6 See also
7 References
8 External links
History
Atlus began in April 7, 1986 as a video game developer of computer games for other companies.[4] In January 1987, Atlus started selling amusement equipment.[4] It expanded into the sale of karaoke equipment in March 1989.[4] Atlus released the first video game under its own name in 1989: Puzzle Boy for the Game Boy.[4]
Atlus started in the arcade industry in the 1990s by manufacturing its first arcade video game, BlaZeon, in 1992. In 1995, Atlus launched Print Club Arcades in partnership with Sega.[5] Atlus entered the Tokyo Stock Exchange in 1997, listing on the JASDAQ. In its goal to further increase its presence in the amusement industry, Atlus acquired the manufacturer Apies from Yubis Corporation in 1999. In 2000, Atlus formed a joint venture with Kadokawa Shoten to distribute and sell games. Atlus suffered from deficit financial results in both 1999 and 2000. To address the issue, Atlus established a management reform plan in 2001. In its restructuring efforts, Atlus sold two subsidiaries (one of them being Apies) to their respective employees as part of a management buyout.[6]
On October 2001, Atlus acquired Career Soft, and became the sole publisher of the Growlanser series: a real-time strategy role-playing game from the creators of the Langrisser series.[7] In 2004, after the release of Growlanser IV, the majority of Career Soft's staff was merged into the main development team of Atlus where they worked on the Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor games. As a developer brand, Career Soft was eventually dissolved.
On October 2003, Japanese toy company Takara acquired Atlus.[8] On 21 November 2006 Index Holdings announced the acquisition of Atlus, effective on 30 October, and purchased 7.7 million shares (54.93 percent; 77,000 votes, or 54.96 percent of the voting rights) on 20 November 2006. Atlus became an Index Holdings subsidiary on 29 November 2006.[9]
On March 2009, Atlus and Sting Entertainment announced a publishing partnership making Atlus the only publisher of Sting-developed games in Japan.[10] On 17 September 2009, Index Holdings announced the separation of Atlus' amusement facility and related business into a subsidiary, New Entertainment Waves,[11] effective on 1 December. One hundred seventy-two shares of the subsidiary's stock were also transferred to Chushoukigyou Leisure[12] on 1 December.[13]
On 30 August 2010, Index Holdings announced its merger with Atlus, with Index Holdings being the surviving company, effective on 1 October.[14][15] After the merger, Index Holdings would continue to operate the Atlus brand.[16] Although fans were concerned about the company's future, CEO Shinichi Suzuki said that Atlus would continue to provide the "finest quality game experiences possible" and the merger "further strengthens the foundation of Atlus, both in Japan and here in the United States."[17] On 9 November 2010 Index Holdings announced its renaming to Index Corporation, to be confirmed at the shareholders meeting on 25 November 2010 and effective on 1 December.[18][19]
From 2010 to 2013, Atlus, as a company, ceased to exist and its name became a brand of Index Corporation for video games in Japan. However, Atlus USA remained active and was renamed Index Digital Media, serving as the North American subsidiary for Index Corporation. Much like in Japan, video games continued to be released in that region under the Atlus name during this period. In June 2013, it was reported that Index Corporation filed for civil rehabilitation proceedings, facing bankruptcy with debts of ¥24.5 billion. An Atlus USA spokesperson said that Index Digital Media and the Atlus brand were unaffected by the proceedings.[20]
On 18 September 2013, it was reported that Sega Sammy Holdings won a bid to acquire the bankrupt Index for ¥14 billion.[21] All Index operations, including the Atlus brand and Index Digital Media (Atlus USA), were transferred to Sega Dream Corporation (a new subsidiary of Sega Corporation) on 1 November 2013.[22] That day, Sega announced that it would change the name of Sega Dream Corporation to Index Corporation.[23]
On 18 February 2014, Sega announced the separation of Index Corporation's contents and solution businesses into a new subsidiary, Index Corporation, renaming the old Index Corporation and its remaining digital game business division to Atlus effective 1 April 2014. The new Atlus would include the foreign subsidiary, Index Digital Media, which would revert its name back to Atlus USA at the establishment of the new Atlus.[24]
In April 2017, Sega Sammy Holdings announced a relocation of head office functions of the Sega Sammy Group and its major domestic subsidiaries located in the Tokyo metropolitan area to Shinagawa-ku by January 2018. Their stated reasoning was to promote cooperation among companies and creation of more active interaction of personnel, while pursuing efficient group management by consolidating scattered head office functions of the group. Atlus is one of the companies that will relocate in response to this.[25]
Atlus USA
Atlus U.S.A., Inc. established in 1991 and based in Irvine, California, is the American subsidiary of Atlus and publishes games created by Atlus and other developers. It was formally called Index Digital Media from 2010 to 2014 in response to Atlus being dissolved into Index Corporation.
A number of Megami Tensei games have not been released in North America. During the 1990s, Jack Bros. for Virtual Boy, Revelations: Persona for PlayStation and Revelations: The Demon Slayer for the Game Boy Color were the first three games in the series to have a North American release. The 2004 release of Shin Megami Tensei: Nocturne was the first main-series video-game release in the U.S.[26] Since then most of the series has also been released in the U.S., including Persona 3, Devil Summoner: Raidou Kuzunoha vs. The Soulless Army and Shin Megami Tensei: Strange Journey.
Atlus USA has localized cult classic Disgaea: Hour of Darkness, created by Nippon Ichi Software.[27] The company have also published the tactical role-playing game Tactics Ogre and Game Boy Advance remakes of the Kunio-kun and Double Dragon games for Million (a company composed of former Technōs Japan employees). Other notable titles include Snowboard Kids and Snowboard Kids 2 (for Nintendo 64) and Odin Sphere and the Trauma Center series. Atlus USA released Riviera: The Promised Land, a role-playing video game for the Game Boy Advance previously released for the Wonderswan Color, in 2004 in collaboration with Sting and Bandai. In 2006 Atlus USA and Sting released Yggdra Union, a strategy role-playing game (RPG) for the Game Boy Advance.[28] After Working Designs' publication of Growlanser Generations, they released Growlanser: Heritage of War in 2005 and Growlanser Wayfarer of Time in 2012.
The company established an online division, including the Atlus Online portal which is servicing Neo Steam: The Shattered Continent and Shin Megami Tensei: Imagine.[29] On 31 March 2013, Index Digital Media's Atlus Online Division was purchased by Marvelous AQL and transferred to XSEED Games.[30] Atlus USA has published games under the Marl Kingdom name, beginning with Rhapsody: A Musical Adventure in 2000.[27]
On 18 February 2014 Sega announced that Index Digital Media would revert its name back to Atlus USA.[24] In March 2016, Sega announced that all the future localized products from Atlus for North America will be published by Sega.[31][32]
European and Oceania distribution
Until 2017, Atlus did not have a dedicated European division for publishing and distributing their titles within the European and Oceania region. Instead, many of Atlus' titles were published in these regions by Nippon Ichi Software (NIS) and its American division NIS America. Following Atlus's acquisition by Sega Sammy Holdings, NIS found that it became more difficult to work between Sega and Atlus for distribution and in April 2016, formally ended its distribution partnership with Atlus.[33] In July 2016, Deep Silver announced that it had come to agreement to become Atlus' distributor for Europe and Oceania, and would begin to publish titles in both retail and digital form.[34] In August 2017, Atlus announced that they had opened a European distribution team located in Sega Europe's offices in London that would publish all its titles going forward.[35]
Corporate mascot
Jack Frost, who appears as a demon in the Shin Megami Tensei franchise, is the company mascot.[29] Resembling a snowman, he has teeth, a tail and no nose, and wears a jester hat, collar, and shoes. His catchphrase is "Hee-Ho". He has appeared in several games in the Shin Megami Tensei series, as well as the Jack Bros. games. Jack Frost is a hidden character in the North American and Japanese versions of SBK: Snowboard Kids, with a larger role in the Japanese version. He has a family; more relatives were created since Shin Megami Tensei II, including King Frost, Frost 5 Senshi and Black Frost.
Media based on Atlus games
- Shin Megami Tensei: Tokyo Mokushiroku
- Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Children
- Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Children 2 Light & Dark
- Devil Survivor 2: The Animation
- Persona: Trinity Soul
- Persona 4: The Animation
- Persona 4: The Golden Animation
- Persona 3 The Movie: #1 Spring of Birth.
- Persona 3 The Movie: #2 Midsummer Knight's Dream
- Persona 3 The Movie: #3 Falling Down
- Persona 3 The Movie: #4 Winter of Rebirth
- Persona 5: The Animation - the Day Breakers
- Persona 5: The Animation
See also
- Vanillaware
References
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External links
Official website (in Japanese)