From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Bandai Namco Entertainment
Japanese video game publisher
Japanese video game publisher
| Field | Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| name | Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. | ||
| native_name | 株式会社バンダイナムコエンターテインメント | ||
| romanized_name | Kabushiki-gaisha Bandai Namuko Entāteinmento | ||
| former_name | {{plainlist | ||
| logo | [[File:Bandai Namco logo (2022).svg | frameless | class=skin-invert]] |
| image | Bandai_Namco_headquaters.jpg | ||
| image_size | 250px | ||
| image_caption | HQ based at the same complex as its parent company, in Minato, Tokyo | ||
| type | Subsidiary | ||
| foundation | |||
| location | Minato, Tokyo, Japan | ||
| area_served | Worldwide | ||
| key_people | Nao Udagawa (president and CEO) | ||
| predecessors | |||
| industry | Video games | ||
| products | List of Bandai Namco video games | ||
| revenue | |||
| revenue_year | 2020 | ||
| operating_income | |||
| income_year | 2020 | ||
| net_income | |||
| net_income_year | 2020 | ||
| num_employees | 790 (2024) | ||
| parent | Bandai Namco Holdings | ||
| divisions | |||
| subsid | |||
| homepage |
- Namco Bandai Games Inc. (2006–2014)
- Bandai Namco Games Inc. (2014–2015) is a Japanese multinational video game publisher, and the video game branch of the wider Bandai Namco Holdings group. Founded in 2006 as it is the successor to Namco's home and arcade video game business, as well as Bandai's former equivalent division. Development operations were spun off into a new company in 2012, Namco Bandai Studios, now called Bandai Namco Studios.
Bandai Namco Entertainment owns several multi-million video game franchises, including Pac-Man, Tekken, Soulcalibur, Tales, Ace Combat, Taiko no Tatsujin, The Idolmaster, Ridge Racer, Dark Souls, .hack and Little Nightmares. Pac-Man himself serves as the official mascot of the company. The company also owns the licenses to several Japanese media franchises, such as Shonen Jump, Gundam, Kamen Rider, Super Sentai, Sword Art Online, and the Ultra Series.
History
On 4 January 2006, Namco Hometek and Bandai Games, the North American consumer game divisions of the former companies, merged to form Namco Bandai Games America Inc., with them absorbing Namco's American subsidiaries which was housed within Namco Hometek's former premises and completing Namco and Bandai's merge in North America. On 11 January, Bandai Namco Holdings Inc. announced that the Japanese video game divisions of Namco and Bandai would merge into Namco Bandai Games Inc. in March 2006. The merger would form together the home console game content, arcade game, and mobile content business under one roof. Both companies in a joint statement cited Japan's decreasing birth rates and advancements in technology as the reason for the merge, and to increase their relevance to newer audiences. Both companies worked independently under the newly formed Bandai Namco Holdings until 31 March 2006, when their video game operations were merged to form Namco Bandai Games. On 30 October, the European divisions of Namco and Bandai would merge as well, forming Namco Bandai Games Europe S.A.S.
In November 2007, Namco Bandai Games announced the absorption of Banpresto (which had been purchased in 2006) and will take over Banpresto's video game software and amusement equipment businesses (which had been traded independently) and will fold it into Namco Bandai Games as they started taken over Banpresto's video game publishing activities which had begun one year later on 1 April 2008, whilst Banpresto's prize business including development and sales of prizes such as UFO catchers was taken over by a new company under the Banpresto name. In August 2008, it was announced that Bandai Networks, Namco Bandai's mobile phone business, would also be merged into Namco Bandai Games on 1 April 2009 and folded.
In September 2008, Namco Bandai Games Europe entered into a joint-venture with holding company Infogrames Entertainment SA to form Distribution Partners S.A.S., which would consolidate Atari's entire distribution network outside of North America and Japan into a single business with exclusive physical packaged-goods distribution rights for video games produced by Namco Bandai and Infogrames within Europe, Asia, South America, Oceania and Africa. The venture would allow Namco Bandai Games to gain a distribution network for the PAL region and would hold a 34% stake, in addition to a stake in Atari Europe and it's subsidiaries. On 4 December 2008, Namco Bandai Games America announced that they would form a new publishing label called "Surge". The label would focus on publishing mature titles intended for a western audience and was intended to create a separate identity solely for this purpose. The first title to be published under the label was Afro Samurai. No other titles were released under the label, with other titles that focused within that target audience such as Dead to Rights: Retribution and Splatterhouse being released under the Namco label instead to reflect the series' legacy.
In March 2009, Namco Bandai Games Europe announced it would purchase Atari's stake in Distribution Partners for €37 million and merge it into its own operations. This followed the news of Atari exiting the PAL distribution market to focus on publishing and developing for the massively multiplayer online market. Atari Europe's assets were merged and folded into Namco Bandai in May 2009 while its sale and marketing personnel were transferred to Distribution Partners, of which the prior deal would have allowed Namco Bandai to purchase the remaining 66% stake in Atari Europe June 2012-2013. The merger was completed on 7 July, and Distribution Partners was renamed as Namco Bandai Partners. Alongside that came Atari's entire distribution operations outside North America and Japan, including 100% of Atari Australia Pty Ltd., 100% of the shares of Atari Asia Holdings Pty. Ltd. and 100% of the shares of Atari UK Ltd. Atari would secure a five-year distribution deal for Namco Bandai Partners to exclusively distribute their titles in those territories. The merger would allow Namco Bandai Games to now hold operations in over 50 countries with 17 dedicated offices.
In 2010, Namco Bandai Games entered the Guinness World Records as the company that released the most TV commercials for the same product, a Nintendo DS game called Solatorobo: Red the Hunter. They created 100 versions of the ad as the game consists of 100 chapters.
In early 2011, Namco Networks was absorbed into Namco Bandai Games America, effectively consolidating Namco Bandai's American console, handheld, and mobile video game development operations.
On 2 April 2012, Namco Bandai Games spun off its development operations into a new company called Namco Bandai Studios. The new company was spurred by Namco Bandai's interest in faster development times and tighter cohesion between disparate development teams. It comprises approximately 1,000 employees, who were already part of Namco Bandai.
In March 2013, Namco Bandai Games established two new game studios. The first, Namco Bandai Studios Singapore, is Namco Bandai's "leading development center" in Asia and develops game content for the Asia Pacific market. The second studio, Namco Bandai Studios Vancouver, works on online social games and game content development for North America and Europe, and is part of the Center for Digital Media (CDM). In July 2013, it was announced that Namco Bandai Partners' operations would be merged into Namco Bandai Games Europe to push distribution and publishing into one entity.
In January 2014, Namco Bandai Games and its development division Namco Bandai Studios became Bandai Namco Games and Bandai Namco Studios, respectively. The change unified the brand internationally in order to increase the "value" and "appeal" of the name. The full company name was changed to Bandai Namco Entertainment on 1 April 2015.
In February 2014, Bandai Namco Holdings announced that beginning in April, they would cease publishing video games under the singular Namco, Bandai, and Banpresto labels; with all current and upcoming video games being published under the standard Bandai Namco Games label from then on.
On 1 April 2018, the amusement machine business division of Bandai Namco Entertainment was transferred over to sister company Bandai Namco Amusement.
On 31 July 2019, Bandai Namco Entertainment strengthen its mobile operations with the by establishing a mobile development studio based in Barcelona, Spain named Bandai Namco Mobile that would focus on developing and marketing mobile games for markets outside of Asia. The new mobile game development studio opened a year later in 2020 with Bandai Namco Europe & Bandai Namco America president and CEO Naoki Katashima leading the mobile division.
At the end of January 2020, Bandai Namco Entertainment who had established its joint-venture BXD with Drecom back three years prior in May 2017 had announced its acquisition of the remaining 49% of its joint-venture subsidiary BXD from its partner Drecom.
In September 2020, Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe and Oceania acquired Canadian video game developer Reflector Entertainment.
In February 2021, Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe took a minorty stake in German developer Limbic Entertainment, eventually becoming the majority stakeholder in October 2022.
In March 2021, Bandai Namco Amusement announced that withdrawal of the arcade game facility business in North America due to closure of various gaming facilities from the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the announcement, Bandai Namco Amusement America was not affected by this withdrawal. In April 2021, Bandai Namco Entertainment America announced it would close its Santa Clara office and move to a new Southern California office.
In June 2022, Bandai Namco Entertainment and ILCA. Inc announced the establishment of Bandai Namco Aces, with 51% of the shares owned by Bandai Namco and 49% of the shares owned by ILCA. This new development company will be responsible for the development of AAA titles, including Ace Combat.
On 20 November 2024, Bandai Namco Entertainment announced the merger of Bandai Namco Online into the company, dissolving the subsidiary as a result with the employees joining the parent company. This came after the disappointing results of Blue Protocol and Gundam Evolution, games that performed below expectations with the dissolution set to be completed by April 2025.
On 18 December 2025, Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe sold off Limbic Entertainment to an undisclosed investor.
Corporate structure
Bandai Namco Entertainment was originally headquartered in Shinagawa, Tokyo, moving their operations to Minato-ku, Tokyo in February 2016. The North American and European divisions are respectively located in Irvine, California, as Bandai Namco Entertainment America, and in Lyon, France, as Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe. Divisions have also been established in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan.
Bandai Namco Entertainment is the core development division of the Bandai Namco Group's "Content Strategic Business Unit" (Content SBU), and the main video game branch of Bandai Namco Holdings.
Software development and subsidiaries
| Name | Formed/acquired | Location | Purpose/Fate | Bandai Namco Aces Inc. | Bandai Namco Studios Inc. | Bandai Namco Mobile S.L. | D3 Publisher Inc. | Reflector Entertainment | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan | Formed as a 51%/49% joint-venture with ILCA Inc., this development studio mainly focuses on producing new content for the Ace Combat franchise. | |||||||||
| 2012 | Kōtō, Tokyo, Japan | Formed as a split from the development portion of Namco Bandai Games in April 2012, Bandai Namco Studios is the main development arm of the company. They create video games for home consoles, handheld systems, mobile devices and arcade hardware, with Bandai Namco Entertainment, Bandai Namco Mobile or Bandai Namco Amusement handling the management, marketing, and publishing of these products depending on the platform. Bandai Namco Studios also produces music and videos based on its properties and has development studios in the European, Asian, and Americas offices. | |||||||||
| 2019 | Barcelona, Spain | Established in July 2019. The company focuses on overseas development of creating and marketing mobile games for smartphones and tablets outside of Asia. | |||||||||
| 2009 | Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan | Acquired by Namco Bandai Holdings in 2009, D3 Publisher mainly focuses on independent, low-cost titles, and is most known for the Simple series of budget-priced video games. | |||||||||
| 2020 | Montreal, Canada | Originally formed by Alexandre Amancio and former Cirque du Soleil founder & businessman Guy Laliberté, Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe purchased all shares in the studio in September 2020, making Reflector a fully-owned subsidiary. Reflector develops immersive, multi-format storyworlds, including video games, podcasts and comics. | title=About Reflector | url=https://reflectorentertainment.com/en/about-reflector | website=Reflector Entertainment | date=3 September 2025}} |
Former subsidiaries
| Name | Formed/acquired | Closed/sold | Location | Purpose/Fate | D3 Go! | D3 Publisher of Europe Ltd. | Namco Bandai Partners S.A.S. | Limbic Entertainment GmbH |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | 2022 | Encino, California, United States | Originally formed as D3 Publisher of America, Inc. in 2005, they were included in D3's acquisition by Namco Bandai Holdings in 2009. They mainly focused production on licensed children's titles, when compared to their parent. They were restructured as a mobile game publisher in 2015 and renamed as D3 Go!. Italian video game company Digital Bros purchased the company from D3 and Bandai Namco in June 2022, and folded the company into 505 Games. | |||||
| 2009 | 2012 | London, England, United Kingdom | Originally formed in 2005 to publish D3's titles in Europe, the company was included in D3's acquisition by Namco Bandai Holdings in 2009. Unlike the US operations, Namco Bandai Games Europe took over publishing duties for D3 titles near the end of 2010, and the company was fully dissolved in February 2012. | |||||
| 2008 | 2013 | Lyon, France | Formed in September 2008 as Distribution Partners, this was a combination of the non-North American and Japanese distribution arms owned by Atari. It was initially 66% owned by Atari and 34% owned by Namco Bandai. Atari sold its stake to Namco Bandai in 2009, which renamed it as Namco Bandai Partners. They remained a separate subsidiary until being folded into Namco Bandai Games Europe in July 2013. | |||||
| 2021 | 2025 | Langen, Germany | A German video game development studio that focuses on game design and programming. Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe acquired a minority stake in the studio in February 2021 before increasing it into a majority stake in October 2022. They later sold the studio to an undisclosed investor in December 2025. |
Notes
References
References
- Gantayat, Anoop. (11 January 2006). "Bandai Namco Games Opens Doors in March".
- Adams, David. (4 January 2006). "Namco, Bandai Complete North American Merger".
- (11 January 2006). "Reorganization of the Japanese Operations of the BANDAI NAMCO Group".
- Karlin, David. (1 November 2006). "Bandai and Namco Finalize Merger Details". 1UP.com.
- https://web.archive.org/web/20090925054346/http://www.namcobandaigames.eu/en/press/2/
- Spencer. (9 November 2007). "Banpresto absorbed by Namco Bandai". Silicon Era.
- "KatanaXtreme.com – Namco Bandai Games Inc. to Take Over Bandai Networks Co., Ltd.".
- Schilling, Mark. (10 September 2008). "Namco Bandai buys Infogrames stake". Reed Business Information.
- (9 September 2008). "News — Infogrames And Namco Bandai Team Up For Distribution Deal". Gamasutra.
- (9 September 2008). "Infogrames/Namco Bandai Europe deal".
- (3 February 2009). "Signature with Namco Bandai Games Europe of a definitive agreement establishing strategic partnership for distribution operations in Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Africa". Infogrames.
- (9 September 2008). "Infogrames strikes Namco Bandai deal | Games Industry | MCV". Mcvuk.com.
- Sheffield, Brandon. "Q&A: Namco Bandai's Iwai Talks Tricky Topics In Western Markets". Gamasutra.
- https://www.gamesindustry.biz/surge-label-new-home-for-namco-bandai-games-that-push-the-envelope-starting-with-afro-samurai
- McWhertor, Michael. (4 December 2008). "Namco Bandai Needs Westerners, Plans "Surge"". Kotaku.
- (25 March 2009). "INFOGRAMES TO ACCELERATE ITS TRANSFORMATION INTO A CONTENT-LED ONLINE GAME COMPANY BY SELLING ITS REMAINING 66% STAKE IN "DISTRIBUTION PARTNERS" TO STRATEGIC PARTNER NAMCO BANDAI GAMES EUROPE". Infogrames.
- (25 March 2009). "Atari speeds up distribution sale to Namco Bandai".
- (14 May 2009). "Atari to Leave Europe?". TheSixthAxis.
- (14 May 2009). "Goodbye Atari, hello Namco | Games Industry | MCV". Mcvuk.com.
- (9 September 2008). "Infogrames in distribution deal with Namco Bandai". Reuters.
- (9 September 2008). "Infogrames And Namco Bandai's Europe Joint Venture". kotaku.com.
- (5 November 2009). "Namco Bandai Holdings Inc. Fully Acquires Three Companies". Reuters.
- (2 July 2009). "Atari announces the signing of the divestiture of its remaining 66% stake in Distribution Partners.". Atari.
- (7 July 2009). "Namco completes takeover of Atari distribution business // News". Gamesindustry.biz.
- (7 July 2009). "Namco Bandai/Atari deal".
- (7 July 2009). "Namco Bandai Europe purchases PAL distribution from Atari".
- (10 August 2009). "Namco Bandai Partners reveals blistereing GamesCom 2009 line up".
- "Most TV commercials for the same product (8 hrs) – regional/Free-to-air". Guinness World Records.
- (5 August 2010). "Namco Bandai Games America/Namco Networks merger". Games Industry International.
- Gilbert, Ben. (10 February 2012). "Namco spins off internal dev studios into 'Namco Bandai Studio'". Engadget.
- Romano, Sal. (10 April 2013). "Namco Bandai opening Singapore and Vancouver studios".
- Long, Niel. (1 July 2013). "Namco Bandai completes merger of publishing and distribution businesses".
- Goldfarb, Andrew. (24 January 2014). "Namco Bandai Changing Name to Bandai Namco". IGN.
- James, Thomas. "Bandai Namco Games changing name to Bandai Namco Entertainment".
- (5 February 2014). "Bandai Namco Games to unify the "Bandai," "Namco," and "Banpresto" labels into "Bandai Namco Games" from April". Game Biz.
- (9 February 2018). "Notice Regarding Reorganization of Subsidiaries". Bandai Namco Holdings Inc..
- (8 August 2018). "最先端技術によるキッズ向け冒険施設"屋内冒険の島 ドコドコ"、立川高島屋S.C.に10月11日よりオープン!". [[Enterbrain]].
- (25 May 2018). "バンダイナムコアミューズメント,イギリスの玩具店「Hamleys」のFC展開を年内に実施予定".
- Sinclar, Brenden. (31 July 2019). "Bandai Namco opening Barcelona mobile studio".
- (30 January 2020). "BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment Inc. agreed to acquire remaining 49% stake in BXD Inc. from Drecom Co., Ltd..".
- Rahman, Abid. (18 September 2020). "Bandai Namco Acquires Montreal Game Developer Reflector".
- Batchelor, James. (23 February 2021). "Bandai Namco take minority stake in Might & Magic dev Limbic Entertainment". [[Gamer Network#Editorial websites.
- Romano, Sal. (6 October 2022). "Bandai Namco Entertainment Europe acquires majority stake in Limbic Entertainment".
- (6 October 2022). "Bandai Namco Europe takes majority stake in Limbic".
- (1 March 2021). "Bandai Namco to withdraw from arcade game business in North America". [[Kyodo News]].
- (1 March 2021). "Bandai Namco Will No Longer Handle Amusement Facilities in America". [[Curse, Inc.]].
- Williams, Hayley. (20 April 2021). "Bandai Namco Is Closing Its Santa Clara Office And Moving To Southern California". [[GameSpot]].
- Takahashi, Dean. (20 April 2021). "Bandai Namco will close its Santa Clara office and move employees to Southern California". [[VentureBeat]].
- "Bandai Namco Entertainment, ILCA Establish New Company Bandai Namco Aces".
- (1 July 2022). "Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. and ILCA Inc. Join Forces to Establish Bandai Namco Aces Inc.". Bandai Namco Entertainment and ILCA.
- (20 November 2024). "Bandai Namco Online, developer of Blue Protocol, to be absorbed by Bandai Namco Entertainment and dissolve". Automaton West.
- (18 December 2025). "Bandai Namco sells Limbic Entertainment to "private investor"". Games Industry.biz.
- "Corporate Data | About Company".
- "Strategic Business Units". Bandai Namco.
- "Bandai Namco Entertainment, ILCA Establish New Company Bandai Namco Aces".
- (1 July 2022). "Bandai Namco Entertainment Inc. and ILCA Inc. Join Forces to Establish Bandai Namco Aces Inc.". Bandai Namco Entertainment and ILCA.
- "Company".
- (6 February 2023). "Company Overview | Bandai Namco Studios Inc".
- (31 July 2019). "BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment opens new mobile company - BANDAI NAMCO Mobile".
- https://www.bandainamco.co.jp/cgi-bin/releases/index.cgi/en/press/10015?entry_id=6958
- (3 September 2025). "About Reflector".
- (11 May 2015). "D3Publisher of America rebrands as D3 Go!".
- (11 May 2015). "How D3Publisher Became D3 Go!".
- (27 June 2022). "505 Games parent acquires D3 Go".
- https://www.gamedeveloper.com/game-platforms/d3-publisher-opens-europe-branch-signs-i-flushed-away-i-
- https://www.gamesindustry.biz/namco-bandai-s-gamescom-line-up-enslaved-naruto-dragon-ball-majin-despicable-me-pac-man-party
- https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/05633464
- (7 July 2009). "Namco Bandai/Atari deal".
- (7 July 2009). "Namco Bandai Europe purchases PAL distribution from Atari".
- (1 July 2013). "Namco Bandai completes merger of publishing and distribution businesses". [[Future plc]].
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Bandai Namco Entertainment — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report