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Traveller's Tales is an English software house founded in 1989 and fully established in 1990 and based in Knutsford, Cheshire. It is part of the TT Games group—after the merger of publisher Giant Interactive and the developer Traveller's Tales—along with TT Games Publishing. Although, in its early years, the software house developed various games based on original content, since 1999 it mainly focused on the development of tie-ins based on toys, films, and television series. ==History== Traveller's Tales started developing games with Psygnosis, which were most notable for creating 3D effects, possibly in order to add minor realism. Their first game was ''Leander'', also known as ''The Legend of Galahad''. With Psygnosis they also did a video game adaption of Bram Stoker's Dracula, as well as other original productions like ''Puggsy''. And thanks to an agreement between Psygnosis / Sony Imagesoft (because of Sony already owning Psygnosis at that time) and Disney, Traveller's Tales could produce several games based on Disney's properties, such as the Mickey Mouse game ''Mickey Mania'' and other games based on Pixar movies like ''Toy Story'', ''A Bug's Life'', ''Toy Story 2'' and ''Finding Nemo'' (the latter two thanks to agreements with Activision and THQ). However, Traveller's Tales was best known in the 1990s for their second-party collaboration with Sega to develop games based on the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise, resulting in ''Sonic 3D'' and ''Sonic R'', which were produced in close effort with Sega's Sonic Team. Both games were regarded as technical achievements in the Mega Drive (''Sonic 3D'') and the Sega Saturn (''Sonic R''), adding to the high-tech development status they already had with games like ''Puggsy'', ''Mickey Mania'' and ''Toy Story''. In recent years, they have achieved recognition based on their work on the hugely successful ''Lego Star Wars: The Video Game'' as well as its many follow-ups. Outside of the Lego games, their work includes the popular franchise ''Crash Bandicoot'', ''The Chronicles of Narnia'', ''Super Monkey Ball Adventure'', and WRC and F1 for the PSP. The company was purchased by Warner Bros. at the end of 8 November 2007, but continued to operate independently with the development of ''Lego Batman: The Videogame'', which was released in September 2008. Thereafter they continued their work on licensed titles such as ''Lego Indiana Jones 2: The Adventure Continues'', ''Lego Harry Potter: Years 5–7'', ''Lego The Lord of the Rings'', ''Lego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes'', and ''Lego Marvel Super Heroes''. It was also announced during the Star Wars Celebration VI that a Lego Star Wars IV was in production, though no in-game image or released date were shown. The company has also produced games based on existing and new Lego properties such as a trilogy of Lego games based on the Chima universe and ''Lego City Undercover'', the first Lego game to be published by Nintendo for Wii U. A Lego game entitled ''The Lego Movie Videogame'' was released on 7 February 2014, together with a Lego movie entitled ''The Lego Movie''. As of 2009, the Lego Star Wars games had sold over 20 million copies, excluding Lego Star Wars III which wasn't announced until 2011. They have sold over 60 million games to date, and have won two BAFTAs; one for Gameplay with ''Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy'', and one for Children's Videogame of the Year for ''Lego Batman: The Videogame''. The company was originally located in a small office in Southport, Lancashire, but later moved to larger offices in Knutsford, in Cheshire. 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「Traveller's Tales」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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