Type | Public |
---|---|
Industry | Video games slot machines |
Founded | 1982 |
Headquarters | Japan |
Website | http://www.visco.co.jp/ |
Visco Corporation (株式会社ビスコ) is a software company located in Japan. It was founded in 1982 by Tetsuo Akiyama (秋山 哲雄, Akiyama Tetsuo) and later became corporate on August 8, 1983 while revealing itself as "Visco" in Japan. They originally developed video games for several platforms from the arcades and NES, to the Nintendo 64 and Neo Geo in the past. When Visco was one of the companies under the Taito umbrella, some of its titles back then were labeled "Taito". They also teamed up with Seta and Sammy in developing arcade games powered by the SSV (Sammy, Seta and Visco) arcade system board until Sammy fully acquired noted game company Sega under a new company titled Sega Sammy Holdings in 2004, while Seta's parent company Aruze announced in December 2008 that Seta decided to close their doors after 23 years of existence. Therefore, the SSV board was no longer being produced. From 2008, Visco began manufacturing slot machines for casinos mostly in southeast Asian regions.
Games released
# | Title | Platform(s) | Release year | Note(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Andro Dunos | Neo Geo (MVS & AES) | 1992 | |
2 | Ashura Blaster | Arcade | 1990 | Game developed by Visco for Taito. |
3 | Asuka & Asuka | Arcade | 1988 | Game developed by Visco for Taito. |
4 | Bang Bead | Neo Geo MVS | 2000 | |
5 | Bang² Busters | Neo Geo (MVS & AES), Neo Geo CD | 2000 (prototype) | 1) Also known as Bang Bang Busters. 2) The game was completely developed, for the Neo Geo's systems (MVS & AES) and Neo Geo CD, by Neo Conception International in 2010. |
6 | Bass Rush: ECOGEAR PowerWorm Championship | Nintendo 64, Sega Dreamcast | 2000 | |
7 | Battle Flip Shot | Neo Geo MVS | 1997 | |
8 | Blocken | Arcade | 1994 | Game developed by KID. |
9 | Breakers | Neo Geo (MVS & AES), Neo Geo CD | 1996 | |
10 | Breakers Revenge | Neo Geo MVS | 1998 | An updated version of Breakers. |
11 | Captain Tomaday | Neo Geo MVS | 1999 | |
12 | Chiki Chiki Boys | Sega Mega Drive | 1992 | A Sega Mega Drive port of Mega Twins, made by Capcom for Arcade in 1990. |
13 | Cowboy Kid | NES | 1991 | 1) Game developed by Pixel. 2) Is known in Japan as Western Kids. |
14 | Crystal Legacy | Neo Geo MVS | 1994 (prototype) | 1) Also known as Tenrin no Syo Chicago. 2) Game and title of origin of Breakers. |
15 | Drift Out | Arcade | 1991 | |
16 | Drift Out '94: The Hard Order | Arcade | 1994 | |
17 | Galmedes | Arcade | 1992 | |
18 | Ganryu | Neo Geo MVS | 1999 | Also known as Musashi Ganryuki. |
19 | Goal! Goal! Goal! | Neo Geo (MVS & AES) | 1995 | |
20 | Great Boxing: Rush Up | NES | 1990 | Game published in North America by Romstar as World Champ. |
21 | Maze of Flott | Arcade | 1989 | Game developed by Taito. |
22 | Neo Drift Out: New Technology | Neo Geo (MVS & AES), Neo Geo CD | 1996 | |
23 | Neo Mr. Do! | Neo Geo (MVS & AES) | 1996 | Game released on license from Universal. |
24 | Panic Road | Arcade | 1986 | Game co-developed with Seibu Kaihatsu. |
25 | Puzzle De Pon! | Neo Geo MVS | 1995 | Game released on license from Taito. |
26 | Puzzle De Pon! R | Neo Geo MVS | 1997 | Game released on license from Taito. |
27 | Puzzlekko Club | Neo Geo MVS | 1994 (prototype) | |
28 | Rally Bike | NES | 1990 | 1) Game developed by Toaplan. 2) Is known in Japan as Dash Yarou. |
29 | Stagger I | Arcade | 1998 | 1) Game developed by Afega. 2) Is known outside of Japan as Red Hawk. |
30 | Storm Blade | Arcade | 1996 | |
31 | Super Drift Out | Super Famicom | 1995 | |
32 | Thunder & Lightning | Arcade, NES | 1990 | 1) Game co-developed with SETA. 2) Is known in Japan as Family Block. |
33 | Thunder & Lightning 2 | Arcade | 1992 | The only sequel of Thunder & Lightning, known in Japan as Block Carnival. |
34 | U.N. Defense Force: Earth Joker | Arcade | 1993 | |
35 | Vasara | Arcade | 2000 | [1] |
36 | Vasara 2 | Arcade | 2001 | |
37 | Vivid Dolls | Aleck 64 Arcade System | 1998 | [2] Eroge developed by Visco. Published by SETA. Similar to Qix. |
38 | Wardner | Sega Mega Drive | 1990 | The Sega Mega Drive port of the game is known as Wardner no Mori Special in Japan. |
References
- ↑ "Shmups!". shmups.classicgaming.gamespy.com. Archived from the original on 17 April 2009. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ↑ "Vivid Dolls - MAME machine".
External links
- Visco Corporation's Official website (in Japanese)