翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Yukamensky
・ Yukamensky District
・ Yukana
・ Yukar
・ Yukari
・ Yukari Fresh
・ Yukari Fukui
・ Yukari Hashimoto
・ Yuji Kunimoto
・ Yuji Matsumoto
・ Yuji Matsuo
・ Yuji Miura
・ Yuji Miyahara
・ Yuji Moriyama
・ Yuji Nagata
Yuji Naka
・ Yuji Nakae
・ Yuji Nakagawa
・ Yuji Nakamura
・ Yuji Nakayoshi
・ Yuji Nakazawa
・ Yuji Nariyama
・ Yuji Nishino
・ Yuji Nomi
・ Yuji Oe
・ Yuji Ohno
・ Yuji Okabayashi
・ Yuji Okano
・ Yuji Okuma
・ Yuji Okumoto


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Yuji Naka : ウィキペディア英語版
Yuji Naka

is a Japanese video game designer, programmer, and producer best known as the former head of Sonic Team, where he was the lead programmer of the original ''Sonic the Hedgehog'' series of games on the Sega Genesis. Since 2006, he has been the head of Prope, a game company he founded after leaving Sonic Team that same year.
== Career ==
Naka learned how to program by replicating and debugging video game code printed in magazines. The experience prompted him to study assemblers and practice writing code during his school classes. After graduating high school, Naka decided to skip university and stay in his home town. During this time period, Naka worked long hours at various menial jobs.
Around 1983, Naka saw that Sega was looking for programming assistants and decided to apply. After a brief interview, he was hired and his first project was a game called ''Girl's Garden'', which he and a colleague created together as part of their training process. Their boss was impressed and decided to publish the game, and it earned them notice among their peers and Japanese gamers.〔 Naka's abilities as a programmer were further demonstrated in 1987 for his work on ''Phantasy Star'' for the Sega Master System, where he was responsible for the impressive pseudo-3D animation effects present in the game's first-person dungeons.
His true breakthrough, however, came in 1991 when he programmed the original ''Sonic the Hedgehog'' game for the Sega Genesis, with Naoto Ohshima designing the characters and Hirokazu Yasuhara creating the stages. The origins of ''Sonic'' can be traced farther back to a tech demo created by Naka, who had developed an algorithm that allowed a sprite to move smoothly on a curve by determining its position with a dot matrix. Naka's original prototype was a platform game that involved a fast-moving character rolling in a ball through a long winding tube, and this concept was subsequently fleshed out with Oshima's character design and levels conceived by Yasuhara. Following ''Sonic The Hedgehog's'' release, Naka moved to Sega's U.S. branch, Sega Technical Institute, where he worked with famed American designer Mark Cerny on the follow-up in conjunction with the original team back in Japan, now known as "Sonic Team". This partnership between the Eastern and Western teams continued through the development of ''Sonic the Hedgehog 3'' and ''Sonic & Knuckles'', though the bulk of the development duties shifted back to Sonic Team in Japan for those titles, which Naka had also returned to by that time.
After the release of ''Sonic & Knuckles'', Naka was moved up to the role of producer at Sega of Japan. During his tenure in that position, he oversaw titles including ''Nights into Dreams...'' and ''Burning Rangers'' for Sega Saturn; ''Sonic Adventure'' and ''Phantasy Star Online'' for Dreamcast; ''Billy Hatcher and the Giant Egg'' for Nintendo GameCube; and the "EyeToy" game ''Sega Superstars'' for PlayStation 2.
On March 16, 2006, Naka announced that he intended to create his own game studio, Prope, and that he would be leaving Sega to do so. Naka stated that he considered it a benefit to be able to create games other than ''Sonic the Hedgehog'' titles.〔http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/119722-Sonic-Creator-Left-Sega-to-Avoid-Making-More-Sonic-Games〕 Following Naoto Ohshima's and Hirokazu Yasuhara's departure by 2002, Naka was the final member of the original creative core that created ''Sonic the Hedgehog'' to leave Sega.

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「Yuji Naka」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.