Bandai Namco Holdings is a Japanese holdings company that specializes in video games, toys, arcades, anime and amusement parks, and is headquartered in Minato-ku, Tokyo.[1] They were formed after the merge of Namco and Bandai on 29 September 2005, with both companies' assets being merged into a single corporate entity. The video game branch of the company is Bandai Namco Entertainment, producing games for home consoles, arcade hardware and mobile phones. Bandai Namco creates several highly successful video game franchises, including Tekken, Pac-Man, Gundam and Tales, as is Japan's third largest video game company and the seventh in the world by revenue, as well as the largest toy company in the world by 2017.[2][3]
Since 1990, Bandai Namco has produced many compilations containing their games, notably their arcade titles from the 1970s and 1980s, for various home video game systems, handhelds, personal computers and arcade boards. Out of these compilations, the Namco Museum series has been the most successful, selling a total of 9.113 million copies total across all platforms.[n 1] Some of these compilations would be outsourced to other game developers, including Microsoft, Mass Media, Digital Eclipse, M2, and Cattle Call.
List of compilations
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A special limited edition was released exclusively in Japan that included a paddle controller and replica promotional material for each of the games[12]
Published by Microsoft as the second installment of the Microsoft Arcade series and the first to feature Namco games (The original Microsoft Arcade featured Atari games)
Was given a re-release in 2000 that included Ms. Pac-Man, renamed Microsoft Return of Arcade Anniversary Edition
Marks the first-ever appearance of Dig Dug II in Europe, as well as its first appearance in North America on a platform other than the NES.
The compilation also includes four "arrangement" versions of Pac-Man, New Rally-X, Galaga and Dig Dug – these are not the same as those found in the Namco Classic Collection series
The Japanese version, simply titled Namco Museum, contains less games found in the North America and European releases
Games can be purchased through the Nintendo eShop via downloadable content packs or individual releases, with a physical version featuring the first downloadable content package