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Games Entertainment

Return of the Game Development Ninjas! 19

simoniker writes "After being exposed in 2006 as 'the biggest game developer you've never heard of', with over 1,100 employees at the time, Executives from Tose have been speaking to Gamasutra about their recently 'blown cover'. The interview explores how this has affected their business working on 'stealth' game development for hundreds of titles (recently including Dragon Quest Heroes: Rocket Slime), in which the publisher takes the credit for the end product. They seem a little conflicted about it, to say the least, as Tose's Masa Agarida notes: 'Actually, I have tried to expose us more in the US than in Japan, but right now, everybody's getting to know us more than before. Right now I'm thinking of going back behind the scenes again.'"
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Return of the Game Development Ninjas!

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  • To clarify... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by MS-06FZ ( 832329 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @10:24AM (#18812115) Homepage Journal
    "After being exposed in 2006 as 'the biggest game developer you've never heard of', with over 1,100 employees at the time, Gamasutra has caught up with executives from Tose"

    To be clear - Tose, not Gamasutra, is the subject of this sentence, the game developer with 1100 employees.
    • by Tofystedeth ( 1076755 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @10:40AM (#18812335)
      The dangling participle is but one of the many tools in their ninja arsenal used for confusing the enemy.
    • by simoniker ( 40 ) *
      Oops, that'll teach me to submit too early in the morning, without recourse to caffeine.
    • Changed, but it's still pretty bad:

      with over 1,100 employees at the time, Executives from Tose have been speaking to Gamasutra about their recently 'blown cover'.
      Since when was Gamasutra's cover blown? That whole chunk in the middle about 1,100 employees makes it more confusing and adds little value.
  • simoniker (Score:1, Redundant)

    So... do you work for Tose? or is it Gamasutra?
  • I've heard outsourced devs called a lot worse.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @10:58AM (#18812559)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I heard that there was this game developer ninja who was eating at a diner. And when some dude left a dangling pointer, the ninja killed the whole town. My friend Mark said that he saw a ninja totally stack trace some kid just because the kid opened an invalid memory address.
      • by ajlitt ( 19055 )
        -Ninjas always use RAII. They leave no tracks behind.

        -A ninja can stealthily break into your /home and kill you in your sleep().

        -When a ninja closes his eyes, he sees only objdump.
  • by djones101 ( 1021277 ) on Friday April 20, 2007 @11:05AM (#18812657)
    Did they ever do any pirate games? One would think that would be a conflict of interest.
    • Why would they pirate their own games? They'd just be stealing from themselves... Wait a minute! That's brilliant! The perfect victimless crime!
      • I hate to state the obvious, but I doubt the parent comment realizez dat Pir@t3s fig4ting n!njaz i$ teh coolest t4!ng in teh wurld, since they are sworn enemies.
        • Whoa, you spelled a lot of words wrong. Can you please post a reply to me saying, "I hate to state the obvious, but I doubt the parent realizes I was spelling the words wrong on purpose?"
  • A secret? (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    I wonder if the reason they want to keep it secret is because American's particularly want to know where their entertainment products are produced? I think we actually need a law which requires that information to be disclosed so that we can make informed decisions when we buy games and want the money to go back into our own economy. That information should never be kept secret from the consumer...in fact, I believe we already have some kind of requirements that products be labeled with their country of o

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