Difference between revisions of "Yoichi Nakazato"

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{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (中里 洋一) is a former programmer at [[Sega of Japan]]. He was the lead programmer for ''[[Kanzen Chuukei Pro Yakyuu Greatest Nine]]''. After some 1995/1996 corporate restructuring, he ended up working at [[Sega AM2]] on ''[[Virtua Fighter 3]]'' and ''[[Digital Dance Mix Vol. 1 Namie Amuro]]''. He may have later worked for Square on a sports game which had a program patented in December 2001{{ref|1=https://jglobal.jst.go.jp/detail?JGLOBAL_ID=200903055869233140}}, most likely ''Neichibeikan Professional Baseball Final League''.
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{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (中里 洋一) is a former programmer at [[Sega of Japan]]. He was the lead programmer for ''[[Kanzen Chuukei Pro Yakyuu Greatest Nine]]''. After some 1995/1996 corporate restructuring, he ended up working at [[Sega AM2]] on ''[[Virtua Fighter 3]]'' and ''[[Digital Dance Mix Vol. 1 Namie Amuro]]''. He may have later worked for Square on a sports game which had a program patented in December 2001{{ref|1=https://jglobal.jst.go.jp/detail?JGLOBAL_ID=200903055869233140}}, most likely ''Nichibeikan Pro Yakyuu: Final League''.
  
 
==Production history==
 
==Production history==

Latest revision as of 05:24, 15 April 2024

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Yoichi Nakazato
Employment history:
Divisions:
Role(s): Programmer

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Yoichi Nakazato (中里 洋一) is a former programmer at Sega of Japan. He was the lead programmer for Kanzen Chuukei Pro Yakyuu Greatest Nine. After some 1995/1996 corporate restructuring, he ended up working at Sega AM2 on Virtua Fighter 3 and Digital Dance Mix Vol. 1 Namie Amuro. He may have later worked for Square on a sports game which had a program patented in December 2001[1], most likely Nichibeikan Pro Yakyuu: Final League.

Production history

References