Tose (company)
Japanese video game developer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tose Co., Ltd.[a] (also called Tose Software) is a Japanese video game developer based in Kyoto. It is mostly known for developing Nintendo's Game & Watch Gallery series, various Dragon Ball games, as well as contract work or assistance to other developers. Tose has developed or co-developed thousands of games since the company's inception in 1979, but is virtually never credited in the games themselves. It is considered the largest non-publishing game developer in the world.[2]
Native name | 株式会社トーセ |
|---|---|
| Company type | Public |
| TYO: 4728 | |
| Industry | Video games |
| Founded | November 1, 1979 |
| Headquarters | , Japan |
Key people |
|
| Products | The Legendary Starfy series Game & Watch Gallery series |
Number of employees | 653 (2025)[1] |
| Website | tose.co.jp |
Tose maintains a policy of having no creative input in the games it works on, going so far as to refuse to put the studio's name in the credits and employees using pseudonyms.[3] As such, Tose has gained a reputation for being a "ghost developer."[4][5] Representatives of the company have described it as a "ninja developer," because it works in the shadows,[6] as well as the "unsung hero" of the video game industry.[7][8][9] When talking to the press, representatives of the company ask not to be identified by name.[10][11] Exceptions to this include Game & Watch Gallery 4 and The Legendary Starfy series, as Tose shares the copyright with Nintendo.[12][13] Tose has also received development credit for Sega Casino,[6] Dragon Quest Monsters Joker 3 Professional, Dragon Quest Heroes: Rocket Slime, and World of Final Fantasy,[10] and co-development on Scarlet Nexus with Bandai Namco and Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII Reunion with Square Enix.[14]
The company provides services for game design, plot design, sound composition, programming, and more.[15] It also does non-games work, developing software for the web, mobile apps, pachinko machines, and even appliances, like refrigerators.[10][16]
History
Tose was established by Shigeru Saito in November 1979 in Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto, as an independent entity of his father's company Toa Seiko Co., Ltd.[17] At the time, Toa Seiko had a contract to produce arcade cabinets for Space Invaders, but its other clients complained about being associated with the gaming industry.[8] It began as an arcade cabinet manufacturer with only five employees. Its first game was the arcade game Sasuke vs. Commander for SNK in September 1980.[13] It released Vanguard, a side-scrolling shooter, in March 1981.[18] Vanguard II, a top-down sequel was made in three years later.[5] By 1982, the company transitioned to software development. When the Famicom released in 1983, Tose was able to partner with Nintendo because it already had experience developing for the console's CPU.[10] It worked with Taito to port Space Invaders to the console, and also worked on Kid Icarus, as well as the Dragon Ball video game series.[19] By this point, Tose had built a reputation as a reliable development partner for third-party titles.[5][20][9]
The company moved its head office to Otokuni-gun, Kyoto Prefecture in May 1986 and Saito was named president. Saito was named president of the company in February 1987.[7] In July 1988, a new head office was completed inYamazaki, Kyoto.[18] In May 1990, Tose began developing software for the Game Boy and the Super Famicom. In 1993, Tose opened offices in Shanghai, China[12][21][22] and Los Angeles, California. The US subsidiary dissolved soon after.[18] During this time, the company began developing mobile games from NTT Docomo's i-mode.[8]
In August 1999, Tose was listed on the Osaka Securities Exchange 2nd Section and the Kyoto Stock Exchange. In October of that year, Tose's Kyoto head office was opened at Shijo-Karasuma. In September 2000, Tose was listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange 2nd Section.[23] A second subsidiary based in China was established in Hangzhou in March 2001.[22] In August, Tose was listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange 1st Section and Osaka Securities Exchange 1st Section. A new office was opened in Shibuya-ku, Tokyo in September 2002.[18]
Following six years of development, Tose partnered with Nintendo in 2002 to release Densetsu no Starfy for the Game Boy Advance. This was the company's first original IP.[24][25] Tose re-entered the US market in March 2003 and was able to establish an office Westlake Village, California[12][26] with just two employees.[27] Saito was named CEO in September 2004.[7] In October, the company established Phoenix Communications as a subsidiary in Tokyo to plan, develop, sell, and manage digital content for the web.[18]
By 2006, 70% of Tose's clients were located in Japan, 15% in China, 10% in the U.S., and 5% Korea, Canada, and other regions. It had six studios across Japan, China, and the United States with 800 employees in Japan and 200 in China.[12] On December 18, 2007, Tose announced the leakage of its business information onto the Internet, which was discovered the day before. The leak included 10 pieces of information relating to customer names, development cases, development contents, development fees, and reception time.[28] By 2008, Tose had opened additional studios in Okinawa, Nagoya, and Sapporo, and expanded to 1,000 employees in Japan alone.[27] After four installments of the Starfy series in Japan, 2009's The Legendary Starfy on the Nintendo DS was the first game to release in North America.[25][29] Tose designed the game to be accessible for Western audiences.[30]
By 2011, the company was producing 110-120 titles each year.[2] On September 1, 2011, Tose announced the separation of its amusement machine development business from its second game development department (ゲーム事業部開発2部) into a separate amusement machine developer (AM開発部).[31] By 2012, Tose had 12 offices across three countries. Business in the US market had been declining following the end of development for Wii and DS games. In order to diversify its efforts, Tose chose to publish its first game, Susume Tactics! for Sony's PSP.[11] In June 2013, Tose dissolved its US subsidiary and opened an office in Manila, Philippines.[18][32] In 2014, the company restructured its development teams.[33] By 2015, the company had 400 employees in China and Philippines.[16] Saito became chairman in 2015, while Yasuhito Watanabe was appointed as president and COO.[7][34]
By 2023, video games accounted for 70% of the company's business, while the remaining 30% came from mobile content.[35] In July 2024, the first three Starfy games were added to the Nintendo Classics collection as part of the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack subscription.[29][36] It was reported that Tose was experiencing financial hardship due to a number of cancelled games from partners including Square Enix and Bandai Namco. For the period covering September 2023 to May 2024 the studio's net sales fell nearly 28%, leading to an operating loss of 599 million yen ($3.7 million).[37][38] Tose announced its decision to wind down operations in Philippines and Sapporo, Hokkaido.[39][40] However, between September 2024 and February 2025, Tose saw a major turnaround in profitability thanks to a 56% increase in sales.[41] Tose announced in 2025 it would prioritize console game development due to mobile game market's saturation.[42] In 2025, Atlus accounted for 22% of the company's total revenue, making it Tose’s top customer for the second year in a row. Second was Square Enix, which made up 17% of the developer’s total revenue.[43]
On June 30, 2025, Tose announced its current offices in Nagaokakyo will be demolished and rebuilt for a 2028 opening.[44][45][46][47]
List of games developed by Tose
NOTE: Titles released before the official website was created and that weren't pictured in the company's corporate reports from either 2000 or 2001 were verified with information compiled by various journalists. Some have not been officially confirmed as Tose-developed products by any of the games' publishers, co-developers, nor Tose itself until Tose created a website to document its work.
- See also Category:Tose (company) games
| Title | Platform | Release Date | Publisher | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sasuke vs. Commander | Arcade | 1980 | SNK | [13][5] | |
| Vanguard | 1981 | [18][5][48] | |||
| Apploon | Sord M5, PC-88 | 1983 | Takara | [5] | |
| Vanguard II | Arcade | 1984 | SNK | [5] | |
| Chubby Cherub | NES | 1985 | Bandai | [49][50][51] | |
| City Connection | Jaleco | [52] | |||
| Exerion | Jaleco | Porting original arcade version to NES. | [51] | ||
| Ikki | Sunsoft | [5][53] | |||
| Knight Lore | MSX | Jaleco | Porting the original ZX Spectrum version to MSX platform. | [54] | |
| Ninja JaJaMaru-kun | NES | Jaleco | Originated as a port of Ninja-kun: Adventure in the Demon Castle. | [55] | |
| Spelunker | Broderbund Irem |
Co-developed with Irem | [20][56] | ||
| Tag Team Match: M.U.S.C.L.E. | Bandai | [5][49][51] | |||
| Space Invaders | Taito | [5][57][51] | |||
| Choplifter | 1986 | Jaleco | Porting original arcade version to NES. | [58] | |
| Dragon Ball: Shen Long no Nazo | Bandai | Known as Dragon Power in North America | [59][51] | ||
| Kid Icarus | Nintendo | [5][60][51] | |||
| Knight Lore | Famicom Disk System | Jaleco | Redesigned version of the original game. | [61] | |
| Mappy-Land | NES | Namco | [62][63][51] | ||
| Ninja Kid | Bandai | [49][64][51] | |||
| Super Xevious: GAMP no Nazo | Namco | [63][51] | |||
| Bases Loaded | 1987 | Jaleco | A Game Boy version was released in 1990.[65] | [5][51] | |
| Dragon Buster | Namco | Porting the original arcade version to NES. | [51] | ||
| Karaoke Studio | Bandai | [5] | |||
| Lost Word of Jenny | Takara | Tie-in to Takara's Jenny doll. | [66] | ||
| Lupin Sansei: Pandora no Isan | Namco | [67][63][51] | |||
| Saint Seiya: Ōgon Densetsu | Bandai | [68] | |||
| Yamamura Misa Suspense: Kyōto Ryū no Tera Satsujin Jiken | Taito | [51] | |||
| Akira | 1988 | Taito | Based on the Akira animated film.[69] | [70][51] | |
| Bases Loaded II: Second Season | Jaleco | [51] | |||
| Demon Sword | Taito | [51] | |||
| Dragon Ball: Daimaou Fukkatsu | Bandai | [71] | |||
| Famicom Detective Club: The Missing Heir | Famicom Disk System | Nintendo | [72][73][74] | ||
| Goal! | NES | Jaleco | [75][76][51] | ||
| Namco Classic | Namco | [51] | |||
| Racket Attack | Jaleco | [51] | |||
| Bandai Golf: Challenge Pebble Beach | 1989 | Bandai | [77] | ||
| Dragon Buster II: Yami no Fuuin | Namco | [51] | |||
| Dragon Ball 3: Gokuuden | Bandai | [51] | |||
| Dusty Diamond's All-Star Softball | Tonkin House, Broderbund | [77][51] | |||
| Golf-kko Open | Taito | [78] | |||
| Hyper Lode Runner | Game Boy | Bandai | [65][51] | ||
| Kore ga Pro Yakyū '89 | PC Engine | Intec | [51] | ||
| Nishimura Kyōtarō Mystery: Blue Train Satsujin Jiken | NES | Irem | [51] | ||
| Pinball Quest | Jaleco | [51] | |||
| Master Karateka | Game Boy | Bandai | [65][51] | ||
| Seaside Volley | Tonkin House | Released as Malibu Beach Volleyball in North America | |||
| Shin Moero!! Pro Yakyuu | NES | Jaleco | [51] | ||
| Sakigake!! Otokojuku: Shippu Ichi Gou Sei | Bandai | [79] | |||
| Shooting Range | Compatible with the NES Zapper. | [80][51] | |||
| Short Order / Eggsplode! | Nintendo | [77] | |||
| Tsuru Teruhito no Jissen Kabushiki Bai Bai Game | TurboGrafx-16 | Intec | [51] | ||
| Yamamura Misa Suspense: Kyōto Hana no Misshitsu Satsujin Jiken | NES | Taito | [51] | ||
| Akuma-kun: Makai no Wana | 1990 | Bandai | [51] | ||
| Bases Loaded 3 | Jaleco | [51] | |||
| Boxing | Game Boy | Tonkin House | Known as Heavyweight Championship Boxing in North America | [81] | |
| Dangerous Seed | Sega Genesis | Namco | [82] | ||
| NES Play Action Football | NES | Nintendo | [83][51] | ||
| Oira Jajamaru! Sekai Daibouken | Game Boy | Jaleco | Known as Maru's Mission in North America | [65] | |
| Roadster | Tonkin House | ||||
| Ultraman Club: Teki Kaijuu o Hakken Seyo! | Bandai | ||||
| Valkyrie no Densetsu | PC Engine | Namco | [51] | ||
| Yamamura Misa Suspense: Kyōto Zai-tech Satsujin Jiken | NES | Hect | [51] | ||
| Bases Loaded 4 | 1991 | Jaleco | [51] | ||
| Frankenstein: The Monster Returns | NES | Bandai | [84] | ||
| Kid Icarus: Of Myths and Monsters | Game Boy | Nintendo | [85][86][87][51] | ||
| SD Gundam Gaiden: Knight Gundam Monogatari | SNES | Bandai | [88] | ||
| Soccer | Game Boy | Tonkin House | [81] | ||
| Super Bases Loaded | SNES | Jaleco | [51] | ||
| Super Tennis | Tonkin House | [89][51] | |||
| Taiheiki | TurboGrafx CD | Intec | [51] | ||
| Bazooka Blitzkrieg | SNES | 1992 | Bandai | Supports the Super Scope[90] | [81] |
| Goal! | SNES | Jaleco | Sequel to original Goal!, renamed Goal! in North America and Super Goal! in Europe.[91] | [75][76][51] | |
| Legends of the Diamond | NES | Bandai | [51] | ||
| Namco Classic II | NES | Namco | [51] | ||
| Pipe Dream | SNES | Lucasfilm Games | Porting original Pipe Mania game to SNES. | [51] | |
| Sangokushi II: Haō no Tairiku | NES | Namco | [51] | ||
| SD Gundam Gaiden 2: Entaku no Kishi | Yutaka | [88] | |||
| Super Tetris 2 + BomBliss | SNES | Bullet-Proof Software | SNES port of Tetris 2 + BomBliss | [92][51] | |
| Toxic Crusaders | NES | Bandai | [93][51] | ||
| Pro Yakyuu Super League CD | Sega CD | Sega | [51] | ||
| Yoshi's Cookie | NES, SNES | Nintendo | [94][95][51] | ||
| Dragon Ball Z: Super Butouden | SNES | 1993 | Bandai | [51] | |
| Dragon Ball Z: Super Butouden 2 | Bandai | [96][51] | |||
| Goal! | Game Boy | Jaleco | [51] | ||
| Tetris 2 | NES, Game Boy | Nintendo | [92][51] | ||
| Yoshi's Safari | SNES | [51] | |||
| Dragon Ball Z: Buyuu Retsuden | Sega Genesis | 1994 | Bandai | [51] | |
| Dragon Ball Z: Super Butouden 3 | SNES | Bandai | [97][51] | ||
| From TV Animation Slam Dunk: Yonkyo Taiketsu!! | Bandai | Based on the Slam Dunk manga series. | [81] | ||
| Kidou Senshi V-Gundam | SNES | Bandai | [88] | ||
| Nishimura Keitarou Travel Mystery: Akugyaku no Kisetsu | 3DO | Pack-In-Video | [51] | ||
| Point Blank | Sony PlayStation | Namco | [5][98][81] | ||
| Rokudenashi Blues: Taiketsu! Tokyo Shitennou | SNES | Bandai | [99][79] | ||
| Super Tetris 2 + BomBliss Genteiban | Bullet-Proof Software | Revised version of Super Tetris 2 + BomBliss | [92] | ||
| Super Tetris 3 | [92] | ||||
| Ultraman Powered | 3DO | Bandai | [19] | ||
| Yamamura Misa Suspense: Miyako Kurama Sansou Satsujin Jiken | Matsushita Electric Industrial | ||||
| Yuu Yuu Hakusho 2: Kakutou no Sho | SNES | Namco | Based on the Yū Yū Hakusho manga series. | [51] | |
| Arcade Classic No. 3: Galaga/Galaxian | Game Boy | 1995 | Nintendo | [100] | |
| Bakushou!! All Yoshimoto Quiz Ou Ketteisen DX | Sega Saturn, Sony PlayStation | Yoshimoto Kogyo | [101] | ||
| Crayon Shin-chan: Puzzle Daimaou no Nazo | 3DO | Bandai | [51] | ||
| Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Battle 22 | Sony PlayStation | Games share character animation and roster.[102] | [51] | ||
| Game Boy Gallery | Game Boy | Nintendo | [81] | ||
| Ida Jiyouji Nightmare Interactive: Moon Cradle: Igyou no Hanayome | 3DO | Pack-In-Video | [51] | ||
| Mario's Tennis | Virtual Boy | Nintendo | [51] | ||
| Ninku | Sony PlayStation | Tomy | Based on the Ninku manga series | [51] | |
| Shinobi Legions | Sega Saturn | Sega | [51] | ||
| Super Bombliss | SNES, Game Boy | Bullet-Proof Software | Game Boy version released as Tetris Blast in North America. | [92] | |
| Virtual Bowling | Virtual Boy | Athena | [103] | ||
| Yuu Yuu Hakusho Final: Makai Saikyou Retsuden | SNES | Namco | [51] | ||
| Dragon Ball Z: Hyper Dimension | 1996 | Bandai | [104][79] | ||
| Funky Fantasy | Sega Saturn | Yoshimoto Kogyo | [101][81] | ||
| Matsukata Hiroki no World Fishing | MediaQuest | [51] | |||
| Namco Gallery Vol. 1 | Game Boy | Namco | [81] | ||
| Namco Gallery Vol. 2 | [81] | ||||
| TurfWind '96: Take Yutaka Kyōsōba Ikusei Game | Sega Saturn, Sony PlayStation | Jaleco | [51] | ||
| Harvest Moon GB | Game Boy | 1997 | Victor Interactive Software | [51] | |
| Dragon Ball GT: Final Bout | Sony PlayStation | Bandai | [105][51] | ||
| Final Fantasy IV | Square | Porting to Sony PlayStation | [81] | ||
| Final Fantasy VII | Co-developed with Square | [51] | |||
| Game & Watch Gallery | Game Boy | Nintendo | Co-developed with Nintendo R&D 1 | [51] | |
| Jigoku Sensei Nuubee | Sony PlayStation | Bandai | Based on the Hell Teacher: Jigoku Sensei Nube manga series. | [51] | |
| Kawa no Nushi Tsuri 3 | Game Boy | Victor Interactive Software | Known as Legend of the River King outside of Japan. | [81] | |
| Konami GB Collection Vol. 1 | Game Boy | Konami | Compilation includingGradius, Castlevania: The Adventure, Konami Racing, Probotector[106] | [81] | |
| Konami GB Collection Vol. 2 | Compilation including Pop n' TwinBee, Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon, Bikers, Guttang Gottong[107] | [81] | |||
| Layer Section II | Sega Saturn | Taito | Known as RayStorm on all other platforms. | [101][51] | |
| Moon Cradle | Victor Interactive Software | [81] | |||
| Namco Museum Vol. 5 | Sony PlayStation | Namco | Compilation includes Metro-Cross, Baraduke, Dragon Spirit, Pac-Mania, and Valkyrie no Densetsu.[108][109] | [81] | |
| Point Blank | Namco | [81] | |||
| Shin Theme Park | Sega Saturn | Electronic Arts | [51] | ||
| Bakutsu Retrieve Master | Game Boy | 1998 | Konami | [51] | |
| Digital Monster Ver. S Digimon Tamers | Sega Saturn | Bandai | [81] | ||
| Dragon Warrior Monsters | Game Boy | Enix | [85][110][111] | ||
| EVE: The Lost One | Sony PlayStation | Imagineer | Part of the EVE series | [112][51] | |
| Fairy Kitty no Kaiun Jiten: Yousei no Kuni no Uranai Shugyou | Game Boy | Based on Hello Kitty. | [113][51] | ||
| Final Fantasy V | Sony PlayStation | Square | Porting to Sony PlayStation | [51] | |
| Game & Watch Gallery 2 | Game Boy | Nintendo | Co-developed with Nintendo R&D 1 | [114] | |
| Grander Musashi RV | Bandai | Based on the Grander Musashi RV manga series. | [115][81] | ||
| Konami GB Collection Vol. 3 | Konami | Compilation including Gradius II: The Return of the Hero, Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge, Yie Ar Kung-Fu, Antarctic Adventure[116] | [81] | ||
| Konami GB Collection Vol. 4 | Parodius, Block Game, Track & Field, Frogger[117] | [81] | |||
| Namco Anthology 1 | Sony PlayStation | Namco | Compilation includes Star Luster, The Tower of Babel , Sangokushi II: Haō no Tairiku, and Wrestleball.[118] | [81] | |
| Namco Anthology 2 | Compilation includes Valkyrie no Bōken, King of Kings, Namco Classic II, and Pac-Attack.[119] | [81] | |||
| Point Blank 2 | Sony PlayStation | Namco | [81] | ||
| Sanrio Timenet: Kako Hen / Mirai Hen | Game Boy | Imagineer | Two versions of the game were released. | [120] | |
| Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Summoner: Soul Hackers | Sony PlayStation | Atlus | [121] | ||
| Theme Aquarium | Electronic Arts | [122][51] | |||
| Thousand Arms | Atlus | [123][124][98] | |||
| Tokyo Disneyland: Fantasy Tour | Game Boy | Tomy | [81] | ||
| Umi no Nushi Tsuri 2 | Victor Interactive Software | [81] | |||
| Uno DX | Sony PlayStation | MediaQuest | [51] | ||
| Wangan Trial | Sony PlayStation | Victor Interactive Software | [125][51] | ||
| Capcom Generation: Dai 2 Shuu Makai to Kishi | 1999 | Compilation including Ghosts 'n Goblins, Ghouls 'n Ghosts, and Super Ghouls 'n Ghosts | [81] | ||
| Chocobo Collection | Sony PlayStation | Square | Compilation including Chocobo Racing, Dice de Chocobo, and Chocobo Stallion. | [51] | |
| Chocobo Stallion | [51] | ||||
| Chrono Trigger | Sony PlayStation, Nintendo DS | Porting to PlayStation in 1999; Nintendo DS in 2008 | [126][51] | ||
| Dancing Furby | Game Boy Color | Based on the Furby toy. | [127][51] | ||
| Dragon Warrior I & II | Game Boy | Includes Dragon Quest and Dragon Quest II.[128] | [129][51] | ||
| Final Fantasy VI | Sony PlayStation | Porting to Sony PlayStation | [130][51] | ||
| Final Fantasy Anthology | [51] | ||||
| Final Fantasy Collection | [51] | ||||
| Ganbare Goemon: Tengu-tō no Gyakushū! | Game Boy | Konami | [131][132] | ||
| Game & Watch Gallery 3 | Nintendo | Co-developed with Nintendo R&D 1 | [114] | ||
| Gunpey | Sony PlayStation | Bandai | Porting original WonderSwan version. | [51] | |
| Harvest Moon: Back to Nature | Victor Interactive Software | A version of the game, featuring a female protagonist, was released in 2000. | [51] | ||
| Harvest Moon GBC | Game Boy Color | Re-released of Harvest Moon GB. | [133][51] | ||
| Legend of the River King GBC | Re-Release of Kawa no Nushi Tsuri 3 | [134][81] | |||
| Metal Walker | Capcom | [135][51] | |||
| Slayers Royal 2 | Sony PlayStation | Entertainment Software Publishing | Porting from original Sega Saturn version. | [51] | |
| Super Bombliss DX | Game Boy | Bullet-Proof Software | Colorized version of Tetris Blast. | [92] | |
| Super Robot Wars Compact | WonderSwan | Banpresto | [51] | ||
| Bass Landing | Sony PlayStation | 2000 | ASCII Entertainment | [5] | |
| Dear Daniel no Sweet Adventure: Kitty-Chan o Sagashite | Game Boy Color | Imagineer | Based on Hello Kitty | [136] | |
| Dragon Quest VII: Warriors of Eden | Sony PlayStation | Enix | [51] | ||
| Dragon Warrior III | Game Boy Color | Square Enix | [111][129][51] | ||
| Gunpey EX | WonderSwan | Bandai | Compatible with the WonderGate peripheral.[137] | [51] | |
| Hello Kitty no Sweet Adventure: Daniel-kun ni Aitai | Game Boy Color | Imagineer | Based on Hello Kitty | [138] | |
| Elie no Atelier | Sequel to Marie no Atelier GB[139] | [140] | |||
| Final Fantasy | WonderSwan | Square | Localizing | [51] | |
| Marie no Atelier GB | Game Boy Color | Imagineer | [139] | ||
| Medarot Card Robottle | [141] | ||||
| Metal Gear: Ghost Babel | Konami | Co-developed with Konami | [85][51] | ||
| Nushi Tsuri Adventure: Kite no Bouken | Game Boy Color | Victor Interactive Software | [142] | ||
| Pia Carrot e Youkoso!! 2.2 | NEC Interchannel | Part of the Welcome to Pia Carrot!! series of visual novels. | [143][51] | ||
| Point Blank 3 | Sony PlayStation | Namco | [51] | ||
| Resident Evil Survivor | Sony PlayStation | Capcom | [5][85][98] | ||
| Sega GT | Sega Dreamcast | Sega | Co-developed with Wow Entertainment | [144] | |
| Winnie the Pooh: Adventures in the 100 Acre Wood | Game Boy Color | NewKidCo, Disney Interactive | [145] | ||
| Super Robot Wars Compact 2 | WonderSwan | 2000–2001 | Banpresto | [146] | |
| Bad Batsumaru: Robo Battle | Game Boy | 2001 | Imaginerr | [147] | |
| Bass Landing 2 | Sony PlayStation | ASCII Entertainment | [51] | ||
| Dragon Warrior Monsters 2 | Game Boy | Square | Released as Cobi's Journey and Tara's Adventure | [110][129] | |
| Final Fantasy Chronicles | Sony PlayStation | Square | Compilation includes SNES versions of Final Fantasy IV and Chrono Trigger. | [148] | |
| Hello Kitty to Dear Daniel no Dream Adventure | Game Boy | Imagineer | Based on Hello Kitty | [138] | |
| Hero Hero-kun | |||||
| Densetsu no Starfy | Game Boy Advance | 2002 | Nintendo | [85][149][150] | |
| Kinnikuman II-Sei: Dream Tag Match | WonderSwan Color | Bandai | [49] | ||
| Final Fantasy Origins | Sony PlayStation | Square, Infogrames | Porting to PlayStation | [85] | |
| Resident Evil Zero | Nintendo GameCube | Capcom | [5] | ||
| Shrek: Hassle at the Castle | Game Boy Advance | TDK Mediactive | [85] | ||
| 2002 FIFA World Cup | 2003 | Nintendo GameCube | Electronic Arts | Co-developed GameCube version with EA Canada, Creations, and Intelligent Games | [151] |
| Densetsu no Starfy 2 | Game Boy Advance | Nintendo | [85][150] | ||
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Caravan Heart | Enix | [152] | |||
| The King of Route 66 | PlayStation 2 | Sega | Co-developed with Sega-AM2 | [85] | |
| Slime Mori Mori Dragon Quest | Game Boy Advance | Square Enix | [152] | ||
| Densetsu no Starfy 3 | 2004 | Nintendo | [85][150][153] | ||
| Final Fantasy I & II: Dawn of Souls | Game Boy Advance | Nintendo | Porting to GBA; additional content | [85] | |
| Virtua Quest | PlayStation 2 | Sega | [154] | ||
| Code of the Samurai | 2005 | Midas Interactive Entertainment | Co-developed with Red Entertainment | [155][timestamp needed] | |
| Dragon Quest Heroes: Rocket Slime | Nintendo DS | Square Enix | [13][111][156][157] | ||
| Final Fantasy IV Advance | Game Boy Advance | Nintendo | Porting to Game Boy Advance | [158] | |
| The Nightmare Before Christmas: The Pumpkin King | Game Boy Advance | D3 Publisher/Buena Vista Games | [85][159] | ||
| Sega Casino | Nintendo DS | Sega | [6] | ||
| Super Princess Peach | Nintendo | [85][160] | |||
| Avatar: The Last Airbender | Nintendo DS, PlayStation Portable | 2006 | THQ | [85] | |
| Densetsu no Starfy 4 | Nintendo DS | Nintendo | [85] | ||
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker | Square Enix | [110] | |||
| Final Fantasy V Advance | Game Boy Advance | Nintendo | Porting to Game Boy Advance | [161][162] | |
| Final Fantasy VI Advance | Porting to Game Boy Advance | [163] | |||
| Ultimate Ghosts'n Goblins | PlayStation Portable | Capcom | [164] | ||
| Valkyrie Profile: Lenneth | Square Enix | Porting to PlayStation Portable. | [85][165] | ||
| Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Burning Earth | Nintendo DS | 2007 | THQ | [13] | |
| Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions | Square Enix | PlayStation Portable | Co-developed with Square Enix | [166] | |
| Front Mission | Nintendo DS | Porting to Nintendo DS | [29] | ||
| GONG! Online | PC | Sleepy Giant Entertainment | [21] | ||
| MySims | Nintendo DS | Electronic Arts | [16] | ||
| Star Ocean: First Departure | PlayStation Portable | Square Enix | Developed enhanced remake of the original | [167][168] | |
| The Legendary Starfy | Nintendo DS | 2008 | Nintendo | [85][169] | |
| Ōkami | Nintendo Wii | Capcom | Co-developed Nintendo Wii version with Ready At Dawn | [170] | |
| Star Ocean: Second Evolution | PlayStation Portable | Square Enix | Developed enhanced remake of the original | [171] | |
| WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2009 | Nintendo DS | THQ | [157][172] | ||
| Active Life: Extreme Challenge | Nintendo Wii | 2009 | Bandai Namco | [160] | |
| Crystal Defenders | Xbox 360 | Square Enix | [173] | ||
| Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies | Nintendo 3DS | Square Enix / Nintendo | [174] | ||
| MySims Agents | Nintendo DS | Electronic Arts | [175][176] | ||
| WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2010 | THQ | [157] | |||
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker 2 | 2010 | Square Enix | [111] | ||
| Pac-Man Party | Nintendo Wii | Namco | [177][178] | ||
| Slime Mori Mori Dragon Quest 3 | Nintendo DS | 2011 | Square Enix | [179] | |
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Terry's Wonderland 3D | Android, iOS Nintendo 3DS | 2012 | Square Enix | [110] | |
| Wii Karaoke U | Nintendo Wii U | Nintendo | [33] | ||
| Disney Planes | PC, Nintendo DS, Nintendo 3DS | 2013 | Disney Interactive | [16][180] | |
| Dragon Quest VIII | Square Enix | Sound and music programming. | Porting to mobile platforms. Ported to the 3DS in 2015.[181] | [182][183] | |
| Resident Evil Revelations HD | PC, Nintendo Wii U, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 | Capcom | [184] | ||
| Monster Strike | Nintendo 3DS | 2015 | Mixi | [185] | |
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker 3 | 2016 | Nintendo 3DS | Square Enix | Development support | [110] |
| Paper Mario Color Splash | Nintendo Wii U | Ninteno | Environment art support for Intelligent Systems | [186][187] | |
| World of Final Fantasy | Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation Vita, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | Square Enix | Co-developed with Square Enix | [10][188][189] | |
| Dragon Quest Rivals | Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch | 2017 | Development support; Service terminated in 2021 | [190][110] | |
| Fight League | Android, iOS | Mixi | Co-developed with XFLAG Studio | [191] | |
| Itadaki Street: Dragon Quest & Final Fantasy 30th Anniversary | PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita | Square Enix | Development support | [110] | |
| The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild | Nintendo Switch | Nintendo | Porting to Nintendo Switch | [192][timestamp needed][193] | |
| Splatoon 2 | [194][195] | ||||
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Terry's Wonderland 3D | Android, iOS | 2018 | Square Enix | [196] | |
| Dragon Quest Monsters: Terry's Wonderland RETRO | Nintendo Switch | 2019 | Square Enix | [110] | |
| Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice | PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One | FromSoftware | Design development support | ||
| Utawarerumono Lost Flag | Android, iOS | Aquaplus | Part of the Utawarerumono series of visual novels. | [110][197] | |
| Aikatsu Planet! | Arcade | 2020 | Bandai | Part of the Data Carddass series | [110] |
| Dragon Quest Monsters 2: Iru and Luca's Marvelous Mysterious Key | Android, iOS | Square Enix | [110] | ||
| Paper Mario: The Origami King | Nintendo Switch | Nintendo | Provided designing and audio development | [198] | |
| Famicom Detective Club: The Missing Heir (Remake) | 2021 | Remake of the 1988 original | [199] | ||
| Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster | Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X/S | 2021-2024 | Square Enix | [195][200] | |
| Scarlet Nexus | PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S | 2021 | Bandai Namco Entertainment | Co-developed with Bandai Namco Studios | [14][201][202] |
| Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII Reunion | PC, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S | 2022 | Square Enix | Co-developed with Square Enix | [14][203] |
| Dragon Quest Treasures | Nintendo Switch, PC | 2022, 2023 | Co-developed with Square Enix | [204] | |
| Nijigasaki High School Idol Club TOKIMEKI RunRuns | Android, iOS | 2022 | Bushiroad | Part of the Love Live! series | [205] |
| Dragon Quest Monsters: The Dark Prince | Android, iOS, Nintendo Switch, PC | 2023, 2024 | Square Enix | Co-developed with Square Enix, | [206][195] |
| WarioWare: Move It! | Nintendo Switch | 2023 | Nintendo | Co-developed with Intelligent Systems | [195] |
| The Battle Cats Unite! | 2024 | PONOS Corporation | Nintendo Switch version of The Battle Cats mobile app | [110][207] | |
| Karaoke Joysound | Nintendo | [208][209] | |||
| Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door | Provided development assistance on sound design and production. | [110][210] | |||
| Soul Covenant | Meta Quest, PC, PlayStation VR2 | Thirdverse, Co., Ltd. | [211] | ||
| Dragon Quest I & II HD-2D Remake | PC, Nintendo Switch, Nintendo Switch 2, Playstation 5, Xbox Series X/S | 2025 | Square Enix | Development support | [212][213] |
| Tales of Graces f Remastered | Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S | Bandai Namco Entertainment | [214][215] |
Tose also worked on a version of Tetris DS for THQ that was ultimately unreleased.[216]