Site Notice

We have a limited coverage policy. Please check our coverage page to see which articles are allowed.
Please no leaked content less than one year old, or videos of leaks.
Content copied verbatim from other websites or wikis will be removed.

Left Field Productions

From NintendoWiki, your source on Nintendo information. By fans, for fans.
Revision as of 20:59, 10 March 2017 by Toa 95 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Company infobox |name=Left Field Productions |logo=150px |caption= |founded=1999 }} '''Left Field Productions''' is an American independent video game deve...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Left Field Productions
None.png
Founded: 1999
Founder: N/A
President: N/A
Parent / owner: N/A
Divisions / subsidiaries: N/A

Left Field Productions is an American independent video game development studio. Based in Ventura, California, Left Field is most well known for its sports titles, such as the NBA Courtside series and Excitebike 64.

History

Left Field Productions was founded 1n 1994 by John Brandwood, Jeff Godfrey, and Mike Lamb.

In April of 1998, Nintendo announced that it had purchased a minority stake in the company, meaning that Left Field would be developing games exclusively for Nintendo hardware.[1]

In September 2002, Left Field announced that it had bought out Nintendo's share in the company, making them an independent third party developer once again. Mike Lamb stated that both parties agreed to the sale as Left Field had not produced any games directly for Nintendo since the start of the year.[2]

Games published by Nintendo

Game Year Console
Kobe Bryant in NBA Courtside 1998 Nintendo 64
Disney's Beauty and the Beast: A Board Game Adventure 1999 Game Boy Color
NBA 3 on 3 Featuring Kobe Bryant 1998 Game Boy Color
NBA Courtside 2: Featuring Kobe Bryant 1999 Nintendo 64
Disney's The Little Mermaid II: Pinball Frenzy 2000 Game Boy Color
Excitebike 64 2000 Nintendo 64
NBA Courtside 2002 2002 Nintendo GameCube

External links

References

  1. Nintendo Covers Left Field. IGN (April 23, 1998). Retrieved March 10, 2017.
  2. Left Field buys out Nintendo investment. GameSpot (September 13, 2002). Retrieved March 10, 2017.


Nintendo logo.png
1st & 2nd Party / Owned
Internal divisions
Subsidiaries
Owned / Affiliated Seattle Mariners* • The Pokémon Company • Warpstar Inc.
* – Former / Defunct
3rd Parties / Partners
8-4 • AlphaDream* • Ambrella* • Argonaut Games* • Arika • Artoon* • Arzest • AS Tokyo Studios • Bandai Namco • Capcom • Camelot • Cing* • Creatures Inc. • DeNA • DigiNin* • DigitalScape • Eighting • Flagship* • Fuse Games* • Game Freak • Ganbarion • Genius Sonority • Good-Feel • Grezzo • HAL Laboratory • Hatena • Hudson Soft* • indieszero • iNiS • Intelligent Systems • Jamsworks • Jupiter • Koei Tecmo • Kuju • Left Field Productions* • Level-5 • Mistwalker • Monster Games • Noise • Paon • PlatinumGames • Q-Games • Rare* • Red Entertainment • Sega (Atlus) • Sora Ltd. • skip • Softnica • Spike Chunsoft • Square Enix • St.GIGA* • Syn Sophia • TOSE • Treasure • Vanpool* • Vitei
* – Former / Defunct
Key employees
Presidents
Managers, etc. Internal
Subsidiaries
  • NNSD: Yusuke Beppu
  • Monolith Soft: Hirohide Sugiura, Tetsuya Takahashi
  • 1-Up Studio: Gen Kadoi
  • ND Cube: Hidetoshi Endo
  • Retro: Michael Kelbaugh
  • NERD: Alexandre Delattre