Company: Bandai Namco Entertainment
One Piece: Grand Adventure
Pac-Man Museum+
Little Nightmares
SoulCalibur VI
The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4
One Piece: Pirates' Carnival
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Ni no Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom
Code Vein
Tekken 8
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Tekken 7
Armored Core VI: Fires of Rubicon
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Eyes of Heaven
Battle City
Dragon Ball: Xenoverse 2
Project X Zone 2
Dragon Ball FighterZ
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Chroma Squad
Star Luster
Naruto: Ultimate Ninja Storm
The Tower of Druaga
Ni no Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch
Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 3
One Piece: Unlimited Adventure
J-Stars Victory Vs
The Idolmaster
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Fallout: New Vegas
Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 2
Eternal Sonata
Dark Souls
Dark Souls III
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Persona 4: Dancing All Night
Dragon Ball: Xenoverse
Snoopy vs. The Red Baron
One Piece: World Seeker
Dark Souls II
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One Piece Odyssey
Pac-Land
My Hero One's Justice 2
The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings
Sky Kid
Mappy
Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Tenkaichi
Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures 2
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In 1984, Namco's sound team released Video Game Music, a compilation album produced by Yellow Magic Orchestra bandleader Haruomi Hosono that gathered together various songs from Namco's arcade games. While not the first album to incorporate video game music (being predated by Yellow Magic Orchestra's self-titled debut in 1978), it was the first to consist entirely of it. In turn, Namco composers Shinji Hosoe, Nobuyoshi Sano, Takayuki Aihara, and Hiroto Sasaki would later form Oriental Magnetic Yellow, a parody group based on Yellow Magic Orchestra.
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In 2011, Bandai Namco created the "United Galaxy Space Force" series that retconned and merged many of their futuristic space games that were previously unrelated to each other into a single continuity. As of 2014, the timeline connects together the plots of numerous games and series including (in chronological order on the timeline) Ace Combat 3: Electrosphere, Cyber Sled & Cyber Commando, Burning Force, Galaxian, Bosconian, Bounty Hounds, Starblade, Dig Dug, Baraduke, Mr. Driller, Star Luster & Star Ixiom, Mizuiro Blood, the cancelled game "Starblade - Operation Blue Planet", Shin-Gun Destroy! Girl's Tank Battalion, the cancelled game "New Space Order", and Thunder Ceptor & 3-D Thunder Ceptor II.
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Bandai Namco heavily assisted Nintendo in the development of their games Mario Kart Tour, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and Arms according to the Products page on Bandai Namco's website. However, they chose to be uncredited for their work in the games' final releases.
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When Namco entered the home video games market in the 1980's, releases were credited to "Namcot" - a separate division of Namco created to handle this area.
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Namco started out in 1955 as a kiddie ride manufacturer named Nakamura Manufacturing. They mostly created rocking horses and miniature train rides, some of which used Disney characters.
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From 1995 to its expiration in 2015, Bandai Namco owned a patent on having a playable minigame during loading screens.