Difference between revisions of "Data East"

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'''Data East Corporation''', known in Japan as '''(株式会社データイースト [Kabushikigaisha Deta Isuto Koporeshon])''', and also called '''DECO''', was a Japanese video game company. Data East was founded on 1976-04-20 and originally made video amusement cabinets like video slot machines. In 1979, Data East created '''Data East USA, Inc.''' to distribute their arcade and casino games in North America. In 1981, three Data East employees formed [[Technos]], which resulted in a lawsuit with Data East, and Technos created several games for Data East before becoming a truly separate company. In 1996, Data East USA was liquidated, and in 1999 Data East, having accrued a massive debt, filed for reorganization protection. Data East switched from video games to various engineering equipment, and continued to license its games to third party developers for a few years before finally declaring bankruptcy in 2003. The company game licenses were sold to [[G-Mode]], [[Paon Corporation]], [[Kadokawa Games]], [[Arc System Works]], and [[D4 Enterprise]].
 
'''Data East Corporation''', known in Japan as '''(株式会社データイースト [Kabushikigaisha Deta Isuto Koporeshon])''', and also called '''DECO''', was a Japanese video game company. Data East was founded on 1976-04-20 and originally made video amusement cabinets like video slot machines. In 1979, Data East created '''Data East USA, Inc.''' to distribute their arcade and casino games in North America. In 1981, three Data East employees formed [[Technos]], which resulted in a lawsuit with Data East, and Technos created several games for Data East before becoming a truly separate company. In 1996, Data East USA was liquidated, and in 1999 Data East, having accrued a massive debt, filed for reorganization protection. Data East switched from video games to various engineering equipment, and continued to license its games to third party developers for a few years before finally declaring bankruptcy in 2003. The company game licenses were sold to [[G-Mode]], [[Paon Corporation]], [[Kadokawa Games]], [[Arc System Works]], and [[D4 Enterprise]].
  
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==Personal==
 
Although I had seen several Data East games in the arcade, I didn't recognize the company until my mother bought me ''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja|Bad Dudes]]'' for the [[NES]] for Christmas around 1990. It was from that game that I saw the Data East logo, and part of why I noticed it is because my brother received the game ''[[Double Dragon (NES)|Double Dragon]]'', whose publisher was [[Tradewest]]. The east/west dichotomy caused it to stick in my mind more. I've played through a fair amount of Data East's catalog of games, and most of them are pretty shoddy. The few that I like are just because I grew up with them in my collection, not because they're especially good.
 
Although I had seen several Data East games in the arcade, I didn't recognize the company until my mother bought me ''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja|Bad Dudes]]'' for the [[NES]] for Christmas around 1990. It was from that game that I saw the Data East logo, and part of why I noticed it is because my brother received the game ''[[Double Dragon (NES)|Double Dragon]]'', whose publisher was [[Tradewest]]. The east/west dichotomy caused it to stick in my mind more. I've played through a fair amount of Data East's catalog of games, and most of them are pretty shoddy. The few that I like are just because I grew up with them in my collection, not because they're especially good.
  
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Overall, Data East didn't create that many games that piqued my interest. They mostly made action and sports games. I've never much cared for sports games, and the action games of [[Capcom]] and [[Konami]] always seemed more impressive. Those games that Data East ported to consoles often suffered large decreases in quality and content. As a publisher, the company released several ports of computer games onto video game consoles, but, when games were first released on a computer, I generally preferred the original computer version and avoided the ports.
 
Overall, Data East didn't create that many games that piqued my interest. They mostly made action and sports games. I've never much cared for sports games, and the action games of [[Capcom]] and [[Konami]] always seemed more impressive. Those games that Data East ported to consoles often suffered large decreases in quality and content. As a publisher, the company released several ports of computer games onto video game consoles, but, when games were first released on a computer, I generally preferred the original computer version and avoided the ports.
  
These are the Data East games that are important to me:
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For all Data East games, see the categories for games [[:Category:Video games developed by Data East|developed]] or [[:Category:Video games published by Data East|published]].
  
===[[Arcade]]===
 
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Bad Dudes - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja|Bad Dudes]]''
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Bad Dudes - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja|Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja]]''
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Bad Dudes - NES - USA.jpg|''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja|Bad Dudes]]''
 
Karate Champ - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Karate Champ]]''
 
Karate Champ - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Karate Champ]]''
Rampage - ARC - USA - Marquee.jpg|''[[Rampage]]''
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Rampage - NES - USA.jpg|''[[Rampage]]''
</gallery>
 
 
 
===[[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]]===
 
<gallery>
 
Bad Dudes - NES - USA.jpg|''[[Bad Dudes Vs. Dragon Ninja|Bad Dudes]]''
 
 
Ring King - NES - USA.jpg|''[[Ring King]]''
 
Ring King - NES - USA.jpg|''[[Ring King]]''
Rampage - NES - USA.jpg|''[[Rampage]]''
 
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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Data East - Ad - Early Products.jpg|Ad for their first games.
 
Data East - Ad - Early Products.jpg|Ad for their first games.
 
Data East - Poster - 1987.jpg|An NES poster from 1987.
 
Data East - Poster - 1987.jpg|An NES poster from 1987.
Data East - Poster - 1988.jpg|An NES poster from 1988.
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Data East - Poster - Arcade Hits from Data East - 1988.jpg|An NES poster from 1988. I had this hanging in my room as a child.
 
Data East - Ad - 1988-06.jpg|An NES ad from June, 1988. I had this on my bedroom wall in the late 1980s.
 
Data East - Ad - 1988-06.jpg|An NES ad from June, 1988. I had this on my bedroom wall in the late 1980s.
 
Data East - 1990 Catalog.pdf|Catalog, 1990.
 
Data East - 1990 Catalog.pdf|Catalog, 1990.
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{{Link|Wikipedia|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_East}}
 
{{Link|Wikipedia|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_East}}
 
{{Link|MobyGames|https://www.mobygames.com/company/data-east-corporation}}
 
{{Link|MobyGames|https://www.mobygames.com/company/data-east-corporation}}
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{{Link|SegaRetro|https://segaretro.org/Data_East}}
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{{Link|GameFAQs|https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/company/12726-data-east}}
  
 
* [https://www.mobygames.com/company/data-east-usa-inc mobygames.com/company/data-east-usa-inc] - MobyGames (Data East USA).
 
* [https://www.mobygames.com/company/data-east-usa-inc mobygames.com/company/data-east-usa-inc] - MobyGames (Data East USA).

Latest revision as of 16:15, 14 February 2024

Data East's logo.

Data East Corporation, known in Japan as (株式会社データイースト [Kabushikigaisha Deta Isuto Koporeshon]), and also called DECO, was a Japanese video game company. Data East was founded on 1976-04-20 and originally made video amusement cabinets like video slot machines. In 1979, Data East created Data East USA, Inc. to distribute their arcade and casino games in North America. In 1981, three Data East employees formed Technos, which resulted in a lawsuit with Data East, and Technos created several games for Data East before becoming a truly separate company. In 1996, Data East USA was liquidated, and in 1999 Data East, having accrued a massive debt, filed for reorganization protection. Data East switched from video games to various engineering equipment, and continued to license its games to third party developers for a few years before finally declaring bankruptcy in 2003. The company game licenses were sold to G-Mode, Paon Corporation, Kadokawa Games, Arc System Works, and D4 Enterprise.

Personal

Although I had seen several Data East games in the arcade, I didn't recognize the company until my mother bought me Bad Dudes for the NES for Christmas around 1990. It was from that game that I saw the Data East logo, and part of why I noticed it is because my brother received the game Double Dragon, whose publisher was Tradewest. The east/west dichotomy caused it to stick in my mind more. I've played through a fair amount of Data East's catalog of games, and most of them are pretty shoddy. The few that I like are just because I grew up with them in my collection, not because they're especially good.

Platforms

Although Data East never produced their own home consoles, they did create the DECO Cassette System, the first arcade system with interchangeable games.

Games

Overall, Data East didn't create that many games that piqued my interest. They mostly made action and sports games. I've never much cared for sports games, and the action games of Capcom and Konami always seemed more impressive. Those games that Data East ported to consoles often suffered large decreases in quality and content. As a publisher, the company released several ports of computer games onto video game consoles, but, when games were first released on a computer, I generally preferred the original computer version and avoided the ports.

For all Data East games, see the categories for games developed or published.

Media

Gallery

Logos

Links

Link-Wikipedia.png  Link-MobyGames.png  Link-SegaRetro.png  Link-GameFAQs.png