Topic: Yuji Naka

Ivy the Kiwi

Follow This Game Add To My Collection . Ivy the Kiwi is a game from Sonic creator Yuji Naka.
fathers" of Sonic the Hedgehog, left Sega to form his own company, many people expected more of the same: During E3 2010, Naka was representing Prope's latest game, Ivy the Kiwi? We took the opportunity to sit down with Naka and ...

Ivy the Kiwi (Wii)

Follow This Game Add To My Collection . Ivy the Kiwi is a game from Sonic creator Yuji Naka.
We're trying a few new things with 1UP's E3 coverage this year, and one of them is that we want to open up our interviews to include lots of community questions.. If you want to ask Yuji Naka about the ...
Yuji Naka, creator of Sonic the Hedgehog, has put his latest character action title on hold, reports Gamasutra. A new interview with Naka suggests that the game he called similar to Sonic has been shelved. "However, we are in the process of ...

Game Changer

For starters, what he does today -- he works with lots of different studios to help develop their games, from everything from the Ratchet & Clank titles to God of War 3 -- is incredibly rare, if not almost entirely unique to him. But when ...
Sonic the Hedgehog is a video game character and the protagonist of the Sonic video game series released by Sega, as well as in numerous spin-off comics, cartoons and books. The first Sonic game was released on June 23, 1991, in order ...
Funny, it was just a few days ago that we were joking in the office about what little chance Let's Tap has for coming to the states. I mean, it's a Wii game where you tap a cardboard box in ...
After being one of the most important people involved in Sega's success (including creating such classic games as Sonic the Hedgehog and NiGHTS Into Dreams), Yuji Naka decided to leave Sega in 2006 to form his own studio, Prope. In an ...

Edge's top games of TGS

So the show is over, the cos-players have scuttled home and Aleks is back in Blightly. Nothing on there makes me think the Japanese games industry is about to go through a creative renaissance (more about that in the Guardian's Technology ...