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989 Studios
989 Studios was a division of Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA) that developed games for the PlayStation consoles and Windows personal computers. Their games include ''EverQuest'', ''Twisted Metal III'' and ''4'', ''Syphon Filter'' and ''Syphon Filter 2'', ''Jet Moto 3'', ''Bust a Groove'', and others. It now exists as the 989 Sports brand owned by SCEA that produces sports games. ==History== The 989 Sports game developed from a long history of name changes and corporate shuffling within Sony centered around operations in Foster City, California. In August 1995, the video game business of Sony Imagesoft was merged with the product development branch of SCEA, becoming Sony Interactive Studios America (SISA).〔''Sony Electronic Publishing Co. renamed; Sony Interactive Entertainment Inc. is established.'' Businesswire, August 17, 1995.〕 On April 1998, SISA was renamed 989 Studios, after the street address of the building they worked in at the time (989 E. Hillsdale Boulevard, Foster City, California). The part of 989 developing ''EverQuest'' (and other online and PC games) broke off to become an independent studio named Verant Interactive in early 1999. On April 1, 2000, 989 Studios was merged back into SCEA as a first party development group, in order to prepare for the then-upcoming PlayStation 2. SCEA continues to release sports games under the 989 Sports brand. Subsequent reissues and sequels to 989's games are published under the SCEA name instead of the 989 name. 989 Studios was also working on many unreleased video games, that were cancelled before to be completed, as Dark Guns, Sorcery (PlayStation), Warhawk 2 (PlayStation), Barnstormers (PlayStation), and The Diabolical Adventures of Tobu.〔''Beta and cancelled 989 Studios games'' from (Unseen64 archive ).〕
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「989 Studios」の詳細全文を読む
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