The Taito Corporation (taitou
kabushikigaisha)
TYO:
9646 is a
Japanese developer
of video game software and arcade hardware.
The word Taito (pronounced "TIE-toe") translates to "far east".
Taito also imports and distributes
American
coin-op
video games in
Japan, as well as
their own games all around the world.
As of 2005,
Taito Corporation is part of
Square
Enix.History
The company was founded in
1953 by Russian
Jew
Michael
Kogan as Taito Trading Company (kabushikigaisha taitō bōeki).
Taito started out importing and distributing
vending
machines. Later, they began
leasing
jukeboxes and they eventually started to
manufacture
their own.

Taito's logo until 1988
Although
Taito was already making coin-op electro-mechanical and pinball games during
the 1960s, it wasn't until
1973 that Taito introduced its first video arcade game. It was
also in 1973 that they changed their corporate name from "Taito Trading
Company" to "Taito Corporation". In
1978
Toshihiro Nishikado, a designer at Taito,
created
Space Invaders which became the company's most
popular title ever and one of the most memorable games in arcade history.
This game was published in the US by
Midway.
Space Invaders was inspired by an earlier
1972
electro-mechanical game by Taito called Space Monsters.
Due
to the huge success of Space Invaders, Taito opened in
1979 an American
division called Taito America Corporation in order to release games in
North
America. Taito America was based in
Elk Grove Village,
Illinois and
was handling the arcade sector of the company in North America. While the majority
of the games Taito America published were games developed by its Japanese
parent company, they did also publish games that they licensed from
third-party
companies, as well as games that were developed in the U.S. for Taito.
Besides
Taito America, Taito had another division in North America called Taito
Software Inc that was in charge of the non-arcade sector of the company.
Based in
North Vancouver,
British
Columbia and established in
1988, Taito Software released Taito games exclusively for home
computers and consoles. Prior to Taito Software, the consumer side was also
handled by Taito America. Like Taito America, Taito Software's catalog was
mainly games developed by the Japanese parent company and occasionally games
licensed from other companies.
1995 marked the last year that North America saw the Taito
label on new games as Taito America and Taito Software closed down their
offices at the same time. Games developed by Taito are still available in
North America to this day but they now bear the name of other publishers.

Taito's current logo
Taito
has had a big influence on the course of videogame history, developing some
very innovative games.
Space Invaders is probably the most notable, but
games such as
Qix,
Bubble
Bobble,
Jungle Hunt,
Elevator
Action, and
Puzzle Bobble also introduced unique and innovative
gameplay ideas.
In
1992, Taito
announced a
CD-ROM-based
console system named
WOWOW
[1], that
would have allowed people to play near-exact ports of Taito's arcades
(similarly to the
Neo Geo), as well as download games from a satellite
transmission (as the
Satellaview would do later). It was named after the
Japanese television station
WOWOW and would have utilized its stations to download games.
The
WOWOW was
never released.
On
22 August
2005, it was
announced that gaming giant
Square Enix would purchase 247,900 Taito shares worth
45.16 billion yen (409.10 million USD), to make Taito Corporation a
subsidiary of Square Enix.
[2]
The purpose of the takeover by Square Enix is to both increase Taito's profit
margin exponentially as well as begin their company's expansion into new
forms of gaming (most notably, the arcade scene), and various other
entertainment venues. The takeover bid from Square Enix was accepted by
previous majority stockholder
Kyocera, making Taito an official Square Enix subsidiary.
On
22
September
2005,
Square Enix announced successfully acquiring 93.7% of all shares of Taito,
effectively owning the entire company.
[3] By
28
September
2005,
Taito became a subsidiary wholly owned by Square Enix.
[4]
On
25
October
2005,
Sega released
Taito Legends, a set of 29 Taito arcade games for
Microsoft's
Xbox,
Sony's
PlayStation
2 and PC. The
PSP version contains 16 games.
Titles
(selection)
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