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SNK

"THE FUTURE IS NOW."

- Slogan

SNK Corporation (株式会社SNK Kabushiki-gaisha SNK?) is a Japanese video game hardware and software company, founded on July 22, 1978 in Osaka, Japan.[1][2]

SNK is most notable for creating the Neo-Geo arcade system, and several franchises of games including The King of Fighters, Metal Slug, Samurai Shodown and Fatal Fury. SNK also helped publish many games including Rage of the Dragons, World Heroes, Ninja Master's, Breakers and Sengoku along with Double Dragon for the Neo Geo hardware.

The company's journey featured a pivotal transition. Eikichi Kawasaki, SNK's founder, established another company, Playmore Corporation on August 1, 2001, just two months before the original SNK's closure due to bankruptcy in October 30, 2001,[3] to ensure that the company's properties would have an entity that can recover those. On July 2003, Playmore rebranded as SNK Playmore Corporation, seeking to reclaim its original identity. Playmore's resemblance to the original SNK led to a return to the original company name on December 1, 2016.

SNK is an acronym of Shin Nihon Kikaku ("新日本企画" "New Japan Project"?), and was the company's legal name until it was shortened to SNK in 1986.

History

Beginnings

Snk-headquarters

SNK's original headquarters in Esaka, Osaka.

When Eikichi Kawasaki noticed the rapid growth that was occurring in the coin-op video game market, he expanded SNK to include the development and marketing of stand-alone coin-op games. Their first one was Micon Kit (April 1978), a ball-and-paddle game similar to Atari's 1972 arcade hit, Breakout. The next two titles out of the new coin-op division were Ozma Wars, a vertically scrolling space shooter and Safari Rally, a driving maze game, both released in 1979.

Initially, the company's nickname was written in katakana, "Shin Nihon Kikaku", but in 1981, it was changed to "SNK" ("エス・エヌ・ケイ" "Esu・Enu・Kē"?) by taking the initials from the Roman alphabet (Shin Nihon Kikaku). The English copyright notation also real "SNK CORPORATION".

Game quality improved over time, most notably with 1981's Vanguard, a side-scrolling space shooter that many people consider the precursor to modern classics such as Gradius and R-Type. SNK licensed the game to Centuri for distribution in North America, who ultimately started manufacturing and distributing the game themselves when profits exceeded expectations.

On October 20, 1981, the North American division (SNK Corporation of America) was opened.[4][5] They established themselves in Sunnyvale, California with the intent of delivering their own brand of coin-operated games to arcades in North America. The man chosen to run the American operation was John Rowe, the eventual founder of Tradewest and current (2005) president and CEO of High Moon Studios.

In 1986, the company name was changed to the nickname "SNK", but the registered trade name had to be "SNK Corporation" ("株式会社エス・エヌ・ケイ" "Kabushiki-gaisha Esu・Enu・Kē"?).[6][7][8][2] This is because the Ministry of Justice at the time did not allow the registration of business names in alphabets.

SNK Corporate in Japan had at this point already shifted its focus solely toward developing and licensing video games for arcade use and (later) for early consoles. Between 1979 and 1986 they produced 23 stand-alone arcade games. Highlights from this period include Mad Crash (1984), Alpha Mission (1985), and Athena (1986), a game that gained a large following when it was ported to the NES in 1987. Their most successful game from this time frame was Ikari Warriors, released in 1986. Ikari Warriors was so popular that it was eventually licensed and ported to the Atari 2600, Atari 7800, Commodore 64, Commodore Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Apple II, ZX Spectrum and NES. They followed up Ikari Warriors with two sequels, Victory Road and Ikari III: The Rescue.

Snk usa 1995

SNK Corporation of America Office in 1995

Even at this late point, the home market was still suffering from the fallout caused by the video game crash of 1983. Nevertheless, one console manufacturer in particular seemed to weather the crash fairly unscathed: Nintendo. SNK signed up to become a third-party licensee for Nintendo's Family Computer (Famicom) system in 1985 and opened a second branch in the United States, based in Torrance, California and called SNK Home Entertainment that would handle the North American distribution and marketing of the company's products for home consoles. By this time, John Rowe had left the company to form Tradewest, which went on to market SNK's Ikari Warriors series in North America. Subsequently, both halves of SNK America were now being presided over by Paul Jacobs, who is notable primarily for having helped launch the company's Neo-Geo system outside of Asia.

In response to strong sales of the company's NES ports, SNK began to dabble in the development of original software designed specifically for the NES console. Two games came out of this effort: 1989's Baseball Stars and 1990s Crystalis (God Slayer in Japan). 1989 also marked the release of two new home video game consoles in North America: the Sega Genesis and NEC's joint project with Hudson, the TurboGrafx-16. Nintendo followed suit with a new system in 1991, the Super NES. Rather than become involved in the early 90s system wars, SNK Corporate in Japan jointly with SNK of America chose to refocus their efforts on the arcade market, leaving other third parties, such as Romstar and Takara, to license and port SNK's properties to the various home consoles of the time with help from SNK's American home entertainment division. With console ports mainly being handled outside the company, they moved on to developing SNK branded arcade equipment.

SNK also licensed Tiger Electronics to market handheld electronic games from some of its brands.

Neo Geo and Multi-Video System

Ng-intro

During 1988 SNK began toying with the idea of a modular cabinet for arcades; up to that point, arcade cabinets typically contained only a single game. When an arcade operator wanted to switch or replace that game, they would have to completely remove the internals of the existing cabinet or exchange the entire setup for another game. SNK's new system, called Neo Geo MVS (short for Multi-Video System), featured multiple games in a single cabinet and used a cartridge-based storage mechanism. The system debuted in 1990 and could contain one, two, four, or six separate games in a single cabinet. In order to swap in a new game, all the operator had to do was remove one cartridge and exchange it for another.

The MVS was an immediate success. Arcade operators loved it because the setup time required for each game was nearly nonexistent, the floor space required was minimal, and the cost outlay for new cartridges was barely $500—less than half of what a traditional arcade unit cost at the time. But SNK also wanted to take advantage of people's desire to play arcade games at home, but without making the same compromises on CPU and memory performance that typical home consoles were forced to make. In 1990, the company released a home version of the MVS, a single cartridge unit called the Neo Geo Advanced Entertainment System, or more simply, the Neo Geo AES. Initially, the AES was only available for rent or for use in hotel settings, but SNK quickly began selling the system through stores when customer response indicated that people were willing to spend the money. Compared to the other consoles of the time, the Neo Geo AES had much better graphics and sound. It featured two CPUs: a 16/32-bit Motorola 68000 main processor running at 12 MHz and a Zilog Z-80 backup processor running at 4 MHz. The system's main CPU was 50% faster than the 68000 processor found in Sega's Genesis console and the Neo Geo AES also had the benefit of specialized audio and video chipsets. A custom video chipset allowed the system to display 4,096 colors and 380 individual sprites onscreen simultaneously—compared to 64 simultaneous colors and 80 individual sprites for the Genesis—while the onboard Yamaha 2610 sound chip gave the system 15 channels of CD-quality sound with seven channels reserved specifically for digital sound effects.

549096-snk 082

Nonetheless, this type of power carried a large price tag; the console debuted at $599, which included two joystick controllers and a game (either Baseball Stars or NAM-1975). Within a few months of the system's introduction in North America, SNK lowered the cost of this package to $399 and added Magician Lord to the list of pack-in options. Other games cost $200 and up—each. Each joystick controller was a full 2 1/2 inches tall, measured 11 inches long by 8 inches across, and contained the same four-button layout as the arcade MVS cabinet.

The quality of the games obviously varied. Some, such as the Super Sidekicks series, were all-new creations, while others were updated versions of earlier successes, such as Baseball Stars Professional. SNK games were graphically bold and bright, with games such as Top Hunter: Roddy & Cathy and the famous Metal Slug series being distinctive and instantly recognisable, no doubt contributing to the system's success in the arcades.

They also produced a Neo Geo CD and CDZ, a 64-bit arcade system, the Hyper Neo Geo 64, and two handheld systems, the Neo Geo Pocket and Neo Geo Pocket Color. Several of their more famous franchise titles, originally created for the MVS and AES systems, have been ported to other systems such as the Sega Genesis, Sega Saturn, Dreamcast, SNES, PlayStationPlayStation 2, Xbox, Xbox 360, Wii, PlayStation 3 and more recently PlayStation 4, Xbox OneNintendo Switch and PC (via Steam, GOG and Humble Bundle).

Neo Geo Pocket

The Neo Geo Pocket was SNK's original hand held system. It was released in Japan in late 1998, and discontinued in 1999, with the advent of the Neo Geo Pocket Color, due to lower than expected sales with the Monochrome Neo Geo Pocket. It was later released in North America and Europe.

Even though it had a short life, there were some significant games released on the system such as Samurai Shodown!, The King of Fighters R-1, and Card Fighters Clash.

Collapse and Rebirth

SNK farewell

SNK's farewell image for fans. Posted on their old official site.

In the year 2000, competitive fighting games, which had become too complex, were in a slump with no end in sight. However, SNK itself relied too much on competitive fighting games, relying on the successful know-how from its heyday, and had specialized most of its development resources in that field, making it unable to make a sudden change in policy was a disaster, and business conditions deteriorated. In particular, the effects of the failure of home game consoles and the poor performance of Neo Geo World had become irreversible.

It became a subsidiary of pachislot manufacturer Aruze (currently Universal Entertainment), and although it once overcame the crisis after receiving a capital injection, the deterioration of the business environment continued unabated, and despite management restructuring led by Aruze, due to the inconsistency between SNK and Aruze, the employees fall into a state of confusion, and as a result, the company is stuck in a slump. Around the same time, Geibunsha's Neo Geo Freak, a magazine that specialized in SNK topics, ceased publication after its December 2000 issue and moved its headquarters to Ariake, Koto Ward, Tokyo. The company relocated and reduced the number of employees by approximately 700.

The highlight of 2000 came when Capcom agreed to create a series of fighting games featuring both company's fighting game characters. When Capcom vs SNK was released, it was a success but most of the profits went to Capcom as they developed the game. SNK released SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium and SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash on the Neo Geo Pocket Color. Combined, both sold an unremarkable 50,000 copies (much due to the unpopularity of the handheld, since both games have been widely praised). SNK closed all American, Canadian and European operations, on June 13, 2000.[9][10]

With low morale and an unclear future, many of the company's employees left their jobs.[1] Some joined rivals Capcom and Arc System Works, and others moved on to found the developer Dimps. Kawasaki, along with· five other former SNK executives, funded the formation of BrezzaSoft, which continued to develop Neo Geo games such as The King of Fighters 2001.

FinalUp

Today it has updated the official site of the SNK company (www.neogeo.co.jp), where it says goodbye to all its fans and clients who since 1978 have made this a company that creates games of excellent quality, mostly over 23 years.

With a total debt of about 38 billion yen, SNK gave up on voluntary reconstruction, and on April 2, 2001, SNK applied for the application of the Civil Rehabilitation Law to the Osaka District Court, effectively going bankrupt.[11][12] The application was accepted, and the revitalization procedures were once proceeded, and the head office returned to Suita City, Osaka Prefecture.[13] The district court decided to abolish the civil rehabilitation proceedings on October 1, of the same year,[14][15] and declared bankruptcy on October 30.[16][17][18][19][20][21][3]

Much of the company's employees disbanded, with a number of them joining together to found the game and hardware developer BrezzaSoft. During this time, SNK licensed game production and development rights for their franchises to several other companies, such as Korean-based Eolith (who gained control of the King of Fighters franchise between 2001 and 2002) and Mega Enterprise (who produced Metal Slug 4), and Japanese-based Noise Factory (who were responsible for Sengoku 3).

Playmorehp

Playmore Corporation official site (www.playmore.co.jp).

Established as Playmore Corporation on August 1, 2001.[22][23] It was originally an affiliate of the former SNK. Initially, it was a legal company specializing in copyright management services, and it would be incorrect to refer to the former SNK as its predecessor company. On October 30, of the same year, the company won the company's intellectual property rights in a bid made during the bankruptcy of the former SNK.

As a part of their efforts to reestablish their presence in the gaming market, Playmore purchased Brezzasoft and renamed it SNK NeoGeo Corp, giving the company an internal game development team. A Japanese commercial games distributor, Sun Amusement, was also purchased in order to provide the company with an arcade distribution outlet in Japan. International offices were established in South Korea, Hong Kong, and the United States under the SNK NeoGeo name for commercial, and later, consumer gaming distribution. In July 2003, with the permission of Eikichi Kawasaki, the founder of the former SNK company, the company changed its name to SNK Playmore Corporation.[24] Today, SNK Playmore in Japan highly resembles the original company. It employs a good proportion of employees from the old SNK and occupies its former building. However, the U.S division has drastically changed, with the office being located in Wall, New Jersey instead of California. As of 2002, SNK Playmore's line of games have been distributed in Europe by Ignition Entertainment, a more recent videogames company based in Essex, United Kingdom.

In October 2002, Kawasaki sued Aruze for copyright infringement regarding SNK's intellectual properties which were used without authorization from Playmore, to the tune of 6.2 billion yen in damages. In January 2004, a preliminary decision was handed down by the Osaka District Court favoring SNK Playmore and was awarded 5.64 billion yen. Within that period of fall and winter of 2003, SNK Playmore obtained an injunction against a group of four different companies, which resulted in hundreds of AES cartridges being seized. But the following year, SNK Playmore struck a compromise with two of the companies as they were allowed to sell the AES cartridges, with the conditions that they could not be modified again and any legitimate materials were to be returned to them. SNK Playmore would within the same year discontinue the AES system, preferring to publish video games in cooperation with Sammy, using their Atomiswave arcade board, which would provide them a more secure platform for new arcade releases. On December 17, 2004 SNK Neo Geo USA Consumer Corporation announced it would rename to SNK Playmore USA Corporation to facilitate worldwide recognition.

In September 2006 in the Tokyo Game Show, SNK Playmore announced that they have ceased production of games on the Atomiswave, favoring Taito's Type X2 arcade platform. To counter the decline in the commercial gaming industry, the company has in recent times shifted some of its development focus to consumer games, including original games for the PlayStation 2, Nintendo DS, mobile phones, and more. Games continue to be ported to the PlayStation 2 and, in some cases, Microsoft's Xbox (mostly in the US since most of the games did not get an approval from SCEA). Only in Japan, SNK Playmore has released the Neo Geo Online Collection for the PS2 containing some of their older games, containing emulations of their classic games, with the ability to play online by way of the KDDI matching service. An original titles were also released based on their existing properties, such as the Metal Slug 3D and the KOF: Maximum Impact.

SNK Playmore USA released its first game on Xbox Live, which is Fatal Fury Special. SNK is now currently supporting Nintendo's Virtual Console service on the Wii in the US with Fatal Fury, Art of Fighting, and World Heroes. On the PS2, The King of Fighters XI, and Neo Geo Battle Coliseum came out for the PS2 in 2007 (with US release dates of November 13 and December 17 respectively).

3198 858482

SNK's Esaka's second headquarters in Esaka, Osaka.

In recent years, Chinese companies showed interest in SNK Playmore and their IP's. Examples of this are the release of KOF 98 Ultimate Match HERO in IGS's PGM 2 board and the guest appearance of Terry Bogard and Benimaru Nikaido in Tencent's Xuan Dou Zhi Wang. In 2015, rumors were reported about the acquisition of the company by the Chinese Leyou Technologies. In August 6, 2015, these rumors became true as the joint venture Zheyuan (formed by Oriental Securities and Shunrong Sanqi/37Games) invested 63.5 million USD in Ledo Millenium (subisidiary of Leyou) to made possible the purchase of 81.25% of SNK Playmore shares. The CEO of Dongfang Xinghui (subisidiary of Oriental Securities, owner of 80% of the acquired SNK Playmore stock), Zheng Jianhui, has expressed his desire to create "the Marvel Comics of videogames" with SNK's vast IP's.

On November 3, 2015 SNK Playmore has announced that it is leaving the pachislot business and will be re-focusing its efforts on making console and smartphone games.

On April 25, 2016, SNK Playmore announced the return of the classic corporate logo back to "SNK". In addition to this, "The Future Is Now" corporate tagline is reinstated.

On December 1, 2016, SNK Playmore Corporation officially changed its corporate name to SNK Corporation (removing the Playmore from the name), together with an updated Neo Geo sound for a new logo opening. According to a 4Gamer interview, this decision resulted from a vote by the company's employees.

On November 2020, The Mohammad bin Salman Charity Foundation announced that it had invested around 813 million riyals ($223 million) in SNK, which gives it a 33.3% stake in the company, valuing the company at $669 million. The investment was made through a wholly-owned subsidiary Electronic Games Development Company (EGDC). The agreement stipulates that the foundation will buy a further 17.7% of SNK's shares in future, granting it 51% ownership of the company.[25]

Snknewheadquarters

The new SNK headquarters, in Yodogawa-ku, Osaka.

On July 29, 2021, SNK named Kenji Matsubara as its new CEO from August 1. Matsubara was previously CEO and President of Zynga Japan, as well as COO, President and CPO of SEGA Games.

In February 15, 2022, the EGDC company become majority shareholder after bought 96% shares of SNK Corporation on the South Korea stock exchange.[26] In May, of the same year, SNK notifies the delisting of your shares on the Korea Exchange (KOSDAQ) and EGDC's future plans to acquire all of the company's shares becoming its wholly owned subsidiary.[27]

On March 20, 2023, SNK bid farewell to its legendary Esaka headquarters, marking the end of a remarkable 35-year era of dissolution and rebirth. The company's most iconic series and platforms were nurtured in the heart of its previous headquarters. SNK's new home is now situated in Yodogawa-ku, Osaka, ushering in a new chapter of innovation and creativity.[28] To commemorate this momentous move, a captivating documentary has been released on YouTube, offering an inside look at the company's history, growth, and the transition to the new headquarters. Additionally, a dedicated special website provides a virtual tour of the brand-new workrooms, allowing fans and enthusiasts to experience SNK's future firsthand.

Intellectual Properties

SNK currently owns the intellectual properties of the following companies:

Logos

Shin Nihon Kikaku

Old SNK

Playmore/SNK Playmore Era

Current SNK

Videos

Promotional Videos

ALL ABOUT SNK【SNKのすべて】

Documentary

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 旧企業情報 (Japanese). SNK (6 August 2001). Archived from the original on 6 August 2001. Retrieved on 23 October 2023.
  2. 2.0 2.1 SNK HISTORY — 株式会社SNK (Japanese). SNK (1 December 2016). Archived from the original on 2 December 2017. Retrieved on 30 November 2023.
  3. 3.0 3.1 https://www.angelfire.com/ga/engallo/copy_of_evil.html
  4. Original SNK Corporation of America Official website (English). SNK Corp. of America (18 April 1998). Archived from the original on 18 April 1998. Retrieved on 20 October 2023.
  5. About US at an archived version of the official SNK Corporation of America website (English). SNK Corp. of America (5 October 1999). Archived from the original on 5 October 1999. Retrieved on 6 October 2023.
  6. 旧SNK 公式サイト (Japanese). エス・エヌ・ケイ (12 October 2001). Archived from the original on 2 June 2002. Retrieved on 30 November 2023.
  7. A site that mirrors the old SNK official website (Japanese). SNK (12 October 2001). Retrieved on 30 November 2023.
  8. SNK Homepage (English). SNK (5 October 2001). Archived from the original on 5 October 2001. Retrieved on 30 November 2023.
  9. Gantayat, Anoop (9 June 2000). SNK Closing Its Doors (English). IGN. Retrieved on 6 October 2023.
  10. Gantayat, Anoop (13 June 2000). SNK Confirms US Closure (English). IGN. Retrieved on 6 October 2023.
  11. 「NEO-GEO」(ネオジオ)などのゲーム機器の開発·製造 株式会社エス・エヌ・ケイ 民事再生手続き開始を申請 負債380億円 (Japanese). TEIKOKU DATABANK, LTD. (2 April 2001). Archived from the original on 8 April 2001. Retrieved on 20 February 2024.
  12. エス・エヌ・ケイが大阪地裁に民事再生手続きを申請! (Japanese). 電撃オンライン (2 April 2001). Retrieved on 14 March 2024.
  13. Funatsu, Minoru (2 April 2001). SNK applies for the start of civil rehabilitation proceedings and abandons voluntary reconstruction (Japanese). Impress. Retrieved on 20 February 2024.
  14. Kitamura, Takakazu (4 October 2001). SNK abandons civil rehabilitation proceedings and releases "KOF2001" with a different distributor (Japanese). Impress. Retrieved on 5 October 2023.
  15. SNKが再建を断念 (Japanese). Gpara.com (2 October 2001). Archived from the original on 17 December 2001. Retrieved on 22 December 2023.
  16. エス・エヌ・ケイ フォーエバー. エス・エヌ・ケイ (29 October 2001). Archived from the original on 2 June 2002. Retrieved on 29 October 2023.
  17. SNK FOR EVER. SNK (29 October 2001). Retrieved on 12 November 2023.
  18. SNKが大阪地裁から破産宣告 (Japanese). ZDNet JAPAN (2 November 2001). Archived from the original on 19 November 2001. Retrieved on 7 February 2024.
  19. アルゼがSNK株主より損害賠償請求 (Japanese). Gpara.com (2 November 2001). Archived from the original on 24 December 2001. Retrieved on 13 March 2024.
  20. Seyoon Park, Andrew (29 October 2001). SNK Corporation closes its doors (English). GameSpot. Archived from the original on 2 November 2001. Retrieved on 6 October 2023.
  21. SNK Waves Goodbye (English). IGN (30 October 2001). Retrieved on 6 October 2023.
  22. 企業情報 (Japanese). SNK. Retrieved on 25 October 2023.
  23. Press Release - SNK Playmore (English). SNK Playmore (8 November 2013). Archived from the original on 1 December 2013. Retrieved on 25 October 2023.
  24. 社名変更のお知らせ (Japanese). SNK Playmore (July 2003). Archived from the original on 25 November 2005. Retrieved on 27 October 2023.
  25. Seoul, Riyadh (7 April 2021). Appointment of Three Board Members from the Mohammed Bin Salman Foundation (MiSK Foundation) Announced at Shareholder Meeting of Japanese Gaming Company SNK. SNK. Retrieved on 5 October 2023.
  26. Results of Tender Offer for the Korean Depository Receipts of SNK Corporation by Electronic Gaming Development Company (English). SNK (15 February 2022). Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved on 5 October 2023.
  27. Notice regarding delisting of SNK shares on the Korea Exchange (KOSDAQ) (Japanese). SNK (18 May 2022). Archived from the original on 30 May 2022. Retrieved on 6 October 2023.
  28. 本社移転のお知らせ (Japanese). SNK (1 March 2023). Retrieved on 29 October 2023.

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External links

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