Tamsoft Corporation (株式会社タムソフト, Kabushiki Gaisha Tamu Sofuto) is a Japanese video game developer, founded on 26 June 1992. Its current president, Toshiaki Ōta, previously worked at Toaplan as one of the six original team members and head of software development.[2][3][4][5]

Tamsoft Corporation
Company typeKabushiki gaisha
IndustryVideo games
Founded26 June 1992 (1992-06-26)
Headquarters,
Japan
Area served
Japan
Key people
Toshiaki Ōta (President)
ProductsSenran Kagura series
Oneechanbara series
Number of employees
90[1]
Websitehttp://www.tamsoft.co.jp

Some of their most popular games were released for Sony's PlayStation console, including the Battle Arena Toshinden series, early Choro Q games and Guardian's Crusade. Tamsoft has also worked on the PlayStation 2 port of Sega's Virtua Tennis 2 and Itadaki Street 3 for Enix, as well as several games in D3 Publisher's Simple 2000 series. Some other famous series are Dream Club, Oneechanbara and Senran Kagura.

The entrance of Tamsoft.

List of Tamsoft games edit

PlayStation edit

Full Price edit

Simple 1500 Series edit

PlayStation 2 edit

Full Price edit

Simple 2000 Series edit

PlayStation Portable edit

Full Price edit

Simple 2500 Portable!! Series edit

  • Simple 2500 Portable!! Series Vol. 5: The Block Kuzushi Quest ~DragonKingdom~
  • Simple 2500 Portable!! Series Vol. 12: The Hohei 2: Senyuu yo, Sakini Ike
  • Simple 2500 Portable!! Series Vol. 13: The Akuma Hunters – Exorsister

Xbox 360 edit

Wii edit

Nintendo DS edit

Full Price edit

Simple DS Series edit

  • Simple DS Series Vol. 20: The Senkan
  • Simple DS Series Vol. 21: The Hohei
  • Simple DS Series Vol. 22: The AgeAge Zeroyon Midnight
  • Simple DS Series Vol. 29: The Sports Daishuugou
  • Simple DS Series Vol. 34: The Haishasan
  • Simple DS Series Vol. 39: The Shouboutai

PlayStation 3 edit

Nintendo 3DS edit

PlayStation Vita edit

Full price edit

Simple V Series edit

  • Simple V Series Vol. 1: The Docodemo Gal Mahjong
  • Simple V Series Vol. 2: The Tōsō Highway Fullboost: Nagoya–Tokyo Gekisō 4-jikan

PlayStation 4 edit

PlayStation 5 edit

PC edit

Nintendo Switch edit

Xbox One edit

  • Melty Blood: Type Lumina

References edit

  1. ^ "会社概要 | 株式会社タムソフト".
  2. ^ "PC Scramble: 東亜プラン 太田俊昭". PC Engine Fan (in Japanese). Vol. 3, no. 2. Tokuma Shoten. February 1990. p. 87.
  3. ^ Neal, David (10 December 2008). "A History of Toaplan – Post-Toaplan". Insomnia.
  4. ^ Iona; VHS; K-HEX (June 2009). "東亜プラン FOREVER". Floor 25 (in Japanese). Vol. 9. pp. 1–70. (Translation by Gamengai. Archived 2020-10-10 at the Wayback Machine).
  5. ^ Kiyoshi, Tane; Tanaka, Haruhisa; Yūsaku, Yamamoto (3 February 2012). "東亜プラン特集 – 元・東亜プラン 開発者インタビュー: 上村建也". Shooting Gameside (in Japanese). Vol. 4. Micro Magazine. pp. 33–40. ISBN 978-4896373844. (Translation by Shmuplations. Archived 2019-09-06 at the Wayback Machine).
  6. ^ 2014-04-08, Hyperdimension Neptunia U is a PS Vita game developed by the studio behind Senran Kagura, Gematsu
  7. ^ 2015-03-14, [1], Dengeki
  8. ^ "Rising Star Games | Drive GirlsDrive Girls | Rising Star Games". www.risingstargames.com. Archived from the original on 18 May 2017.
  9. ^ 2016-10-25, [2], Gematsu
  10. ^ 2019-09-11,Pikki and Tamsoft Announce Action Game Hinomaruko for PS4 & Switch, Gematsu
  11. ^ "Melty Blood: Type Lumina – Saber Story Mode (PS5 1440p)". Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ 2014-04-08, Hyperdimension Neptunia U is a PS Vita game developed by the studio behind Senran Kagura, Gematsu
  13. ^ "MegaTagmension Blanc + Neptune VS Zombies (Neptunia) on Steam".

External links edit