horror mangaka Rei Mikamoto's response to a viral tweet about how Choshu Electric Railway makes twice as much money selling rice crackers as it does operating a railway: "when I worked for a game company, their best selling product was their steam buns (& they were delicious)"🇯🇵
the product he's referring to is the Puyoman, Compile's Puyo-themed manju—this wasn't a mere licensed product; Compile eventually produced & distributed these in-house, and they were not only genuinely popular but the core pillar of Compile's business in their twilight years
as others pointed out, it's super beneficial for game businesses to have reliable side-hustles because it makes them more attractive to banks and so on
...and then you get ventures like Jaleco's aquarium equipment, Data East's shiitake mushroom kits and alleged zillion other offshoots, etc which weren't nearly as successful
Puyoman's stuck in rights hell, unfortunately: Sega owns the characters, D4 owns the trademark and former Compile president Niitani owns the recipe, and while there have been a few false starts, they've never all been able to cut a deal to bring it back
every so often, Sega will try to evoke Puyoman with some new limited-time snack: Puyo taiyaki, Puyo nikuman, etc
former Compile president also promised "Nyokiman" as a backer reward for a crowdfunded version of his puzzle game Nyoki Nyoki (it didn't succeed...)
btw, if you just wanna eat something Puyo-shaped, a Japanese candy company called Lion has been putting out Puyo Puyo gummies forever—these are the newest ones, and they'll probably do another batch of Puyo Puyo Tetris gummies from next month amazon.co.jp/%E3%83%A9%E3%8…🇯🇵
here's a short video feature on Compile's empire at their arguable commercial peak in 1996—unchecked ambition, marketing spend & overzealous expansion into other industries would be their downfall; Compile went bankrupt in '98 & ended for good in '03
Compile's president saw the takeover of Windows and thought he'd be able to push Power Acty as this ultra-chic super-mainstream thing and tried advertising it the way they did Puyo, with big marketing stunts, commercials, etc and it absolutely did not work
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Famitsu posted their developer aspirations feature, with 141 devs & assorted industry figures sharing their goals for 2023 famitsu.com/news/202212/27…🇯🇵 dog tired atm but I'll share any that catch my fancy
ArcSys' Daisuke Ishiwatari's aspiration for 2023: he notes how he's subscribed to multiple video services but just browsing them for things to "consume" feels like work, & even though the average quality of content has risen sharply, it's hard to get excited, and in wondering...
...why that might be, he wonders if having so much easily-accessible quality media might be diminishing the value one places on things, so his aspiration for 2023 is to go back to basics and try to create things that people will feel are important to them
as 2022 winds down, I feel like taking a look back at everything published on @shmuplations over the last year—I'm sure there are plenty of translations that people might've missed for whatever reason, so maybe you'll discover something new: (thread)
first off, a big site redesign went live at the beginning of the year—the original design was not only showing its age but becoming unwieldy on the backend, so it was a long time coming
kicking off 2022's interview content was this 2007 interview with programmer Masayuki Yamamoto on his contributions to Nihon Telenet and their influential anime-esque action/RPG series, Valis shmuplations.com/valis/
it also includes a story about a clever dev workaround…
denfami interviewed Masahiro Sakurai on his jump to youtube: why he did it, how he does it & the secrets nobody's yet picked up on news.denfaminicogamer.jp/interview/2212…🇯🇵
one of the big things he emphasises early on is how extremely specific his channel is—it's helmed by a high-profile, multi-genre director with the freedom to talk about past work, who's also familiar with many other games, good at visual presentation, has a track record of...
…regular, consistent content production (via his Famitsu column), is willing to eat the cost of regular video production without worrying about profits, /and/ he knows the mission & can do what can be quite lonely work without getting caught up in second-guessing or self-doubt
heads up for anyone who imported a Japanese Mega Drive Mini 2: there's a link & 4-digit password for a user questionnaire on one of the inner flaps of the box, which includes questions about future Minis—here are the questions, one by one: (thread)
#1: when did you buy the Mega Drive Mini 2? (release date: October 27, 2022)
-I pre-ordered
-I bought it on launch day (no preorder)
-I bought it within a week of launch
-I bought it a week or longer from launch
#2: where'd you buy MD Mini 2?
(physical)
-game store
-electronics/camera store
-toy store
-dept store
-CD/book store
-conbini
-other
(online)
-major online store
-electronics/camera online store
-online toy store
-online dept store
-online CD/book store
-Sega Shop
-other
on the reception to the OG MD Mini: when Nintendo announced the FC Mini in 2016, Okunari put together a proposal for a MD Mini the very next day; during the pitching process, Nintendo also put out the SFC Mini
bc the MD Mini was designed under the shadow of Nintendo's minis (>)
...they designed it from the perspective of being a latecomer & thinking hard about how they could clear the bar set by Nintendo, which meant going above & beyond
the SFC Mini had 21 games, so they had have 42—they had Starfox 2, so he wanted to add two big bonus games, etc