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Synergy (video game company)

Japanese video game company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Synergy (video game company)
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Synergy Inc., which went by the trade name Synergy Geometry Co., Ltd., was a Japanese video game developer and publisher headquartered in Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo. The company is best known for its point-and-click adventure games, which employed pre-rendered 3D computer graphics, including Alice: An Interactive Museum (1991) and Gadget: Invention, Travel & Adventure (1993), both of which were designed by Haruhiko Shono.

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The company also had an American branch named Synergy Interactive Co., based in San Mateo, California, which focused on video game localization, publishing and marketing for western audiences.[2]

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List of games

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Cancelled projects

Underworld: The Sands of Time

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"Underworld: The Sands of Time" Key Art (1997).

Underworld: The Sands of Time, originally announced under the tentative title of The Underground,[5] was a point-and-click interactive movie directed by Haruhiko Shono, following the development of Gadget: Past as Future. A roughly 5 minute sneak peek for the game was included in Preview & Reprise, an interactive CD-ROM released on November 27, 1997.[6]

Woodcutters from Fiery Ships

Woodcutters from Fiery Ships was announced in early 1998 as a collaboration between Synergy Inc. and David Lynch's interactive company SubStation, with a tentative release window of Fall 1999. In the press release, Lynch said: "I saw the work that Synergy did on Gadget – the way that the game delivered an immersive experience to the user. By collaborating with Synergy, I look forward to Woodcutters From Fiery Ships expanding existing forms in terms of story, characters and environment. I hope we will give people totally unexpected experiences."[7]

In a November 1999 interview with The Guardian, Lynch stated that the project was "blocked from the get-go", as it was going to be "completely boring to game buffs".[8]

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Notes

  1. Developed by Caravan Interactive

References

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