Company:tri-Ace

From HandWiki
Short description: Japanese video game development company

tri-Ace, Inc.
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
FoundedMarch 1995
Headquarters,
Key people
  • Yoshiharu Gotanda (president)
  • Masaki Norimoto (designer)
  • Motoi Sakuraba (composer)
Products
Number of employees
182 (2022)[1]
ParentNepro Japan (2015–present)
Websitetri-ace.co.jp

tri-Ace, Inc. (株式会社トライエース, Kabushiki Gaisha Toraiēsu) is a Japanese video game developer founded in 1995. They are known for their role-playing games, most notably the Star Ocean and Valkyrie Profile series.

History

tri-Ace was formed in March 1995 by former Telenet Japan employees Yoshiharu Gotanda (programmer, current tri-Ace President), Masaki Norimoto (game designer) and Joe Asanuma (director). The name is a play on words regarding the "three aces" who formed the company. Most of tri-Ace's games have been published by Square Enix (formerly Enix).

The company exclusively makes role-playing video games, and is known for giving their games' action-packed battle systems and deep skill systems. This trademark style began when the founders of tri-Ace originally worked for Telenet Japan's Wolfteam, and had created Tales of Phantasia. This game, published by Namco, is a precursor to tri-Ace's own Star Ocean games in several ways; e.g., an action battle system where the player controls one character and AI controls others in the party and special battle skills that the player can assign to different buttons. Besides the Star Ocean series, they also released Valkyrie Profile in 1999.

After their long-time Square Enix liaison and producer, Yoshinori Yamagishi, announced that he was done working on the Star Ocean series in 2009,[2] several of tri-Ace's works started to be published by different game companies other than Square Enix. Such as their 2010 release of Resonance of Fate which was taken to Sega publishing.[3] As well, onwards there began to be a lack of tri-Ace games that received English localizations until Exist Archive in 2016.

tri-Ace games have sold over 3.8 million copies worldwide as of September 2005.[4] The company's sound programmer Hiroya Hatsushiba formed tri-Crescendo in 1999 which has since developed several games independently of tri-Ace.

Japanese mobile company Nepro Japan acquired tri-Ace in February 2015.[5] Despite being acquired by a company focusing on mobile gaming, tri-Ace continued developing video games for consoles,[6] as evidenced by Star Ocean in 2016 and then Star Ocean in 2022, but weeks before the release for Star Ocean: The Divine Force, tri-Ace was reported to have financial issues and was insolvent.[7][8]

Games developed

Year Title[3] Publisher(s) Platform(s)
1996 Star Ocean Enix SNES
1998 Star Ocean PlayStation
1999 Valkyrie Profile
2001 Star Ocean Game Boy Color
2003 Star Ocean PlayStation 2
2004 Star Ocean: Till the End of Time Director's Cut Square Enix
2005 Radiata Stories
2006 Valkyrie Profile 2
2008 Infinite Undiscovery Xbox 360
Valkyrie Profile Nintendo DS
2009 Star Ocean Xbox 360
2010 Resonance of Fate Sega PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Star Ocean: The Last Hope International Square Enix PlayStation 3
2011 Final Fantasy XIII-2[9] PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Frontier Gate Konami PlayStation Portable
2012 Beyond the Labyrinth Nintendo 3DS
Danball Senki W Level 5 PlayStation Portable, PlayStation Vita
2013 Frontier Gate Boost+ Konami PlayStation Portable
Lightning Returns[10] Square Enix PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
2014 Silent Scope: Bone-Eater Konami Arcade
Judas Code tri-Ace PlayStation Vita
Phantasy Star Nova Sega
2015 Exist Archive: The Other Side of the Sky Spike Chunsoft PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita
2016 Star Ocean Square Enix PlayStation 4, PlayStation 3
Heaven × Inferno NTT Docomo iOS, Android
Star Ocean Square Enix
2017 Star Ocean: The Last Hope - 4K & Full HD Remaster Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4
2018 Resonance of Fate 4K / HD Edition tri-Ace
2018 Mist Gears Shueisha iOS, Android
2022 Star Ocean Square Enix Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S

References

  1. https://www.tri-ace.co.jp/en/company/about.html
  2. Winkler, Chris (2009-09-25). "Producer Done With Star Ocean". http://www.rpgfan.com/news/2009/473.html. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "株式会社トライエース" (in ja). https://www.tri-ace.co.jp/products/. 
  4. "tri-Ace Company Sales". tri-Ace.co.jp. http://www.tri-ace.co.jp/company/sales.html. 
  5. Matulef, Jeffrey (February 20, 2015). "Star Ocean developer tri-Ace acquired by Japanese mobile company". Gamer Network. http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2015-02-20-star-ocean-developer-tri-ace-acquired-by-japanese-mobile-company. 
  6. "Don't Worry, tri-Ace Will Keep Making Games For Consoles". Siliconera. March 9, 2015. http://www.siliconera.com/2015/03/09/dont-worry-tri-ace-will-keep-making-games-consoles/. 
  7. "Report: Star Ocean Dev Tri-Ace Takes Major Fiscal Losses" (in en-US). 2022-10-06. https://www.siliconera.com/report-star-ocean-dev-tri-ace-takes-major-fiscal-losses/. 
  8. "トライエース、22年6月期決算は経常損失6.2億円 前年2.4億円の黒字から赤字転落、債務超過に 『スターオーシャン6』開発 | gamebiz" (in ja). https://gamebiz.jp/news/357563. 
  9. "Tri-Ace Helped Out With Final Fantasy XIII-2". Siliconera. December 18, 2011. http://www.siliconera.com/2011/12/18/tri-ace-helped-out-with-final-fantasy-xiii-2/. 
  10. Spencer (November 13, 2013). "NORA Won't Return For Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII". Siliconera. http://www.siliconera.com/2013/11/13/nora-wont-return-lightning-returns-final-fantasy-xiii/. 

External links