BootlegGames Wiki
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{{infobox company
+
{{Infobox company
 
|name = NTDEC / Asder
|image=File:Ntdec_asder.png
+
|image = File:Ntdec asder.png
|name = NTDEC / Asder
 
  +
|caption = Logo.
|location = Xinyi district, Taipei, Taiwan
+
|location = Xinyi district, Taipei, Taiwan
|years = 1983-present
+
|years = 1983-present
|consoles = Famicom/NES
+
|consoles = Famicom / NES
 
|firstgame = Pokey
 
|firstgame = Pokey
|lastgame =
+
|lastgame =
|sounds = NTDEC
+
|sounds = NTDEC
|aliases = Mega Soft, Caltron, Multi-Idea Co., Ltd
+
|aliases = Mega Soft, Caltron, Multi-Idea Co., Ltd
 
|connected = [[Rex Soft]], Tip Top
 
|connected = [[Rex Soft]], Tip Top
 
}}
 
}}
'''NTDEC''' (Nintendo Electronic Co., 任天堂電子有限公司) is a company that produced pirate Famicom and NES cartridges from 1989 to 1991, and numerous unlicensed original games from 1991 onwards, although the company itself has been active since 1983. Since 1993 it has operated under the name '''Asder''' (亞斯德科技有限公司), and currently produces children's educational products.<ref>http://www.asder.com/</ref>
+
'''NTDEC''' (Nintendo Electronic Co., 任天堂電子有限公司) is a company that produced pirate Famicom and NES cartridges from 1988 to 1991, and numerous unlicensed original games from 1991 onwards, although the company itself has been active since 1983. Since 1993 it has operated under the name '''Asder''' (亞斯德科技有限公司), and currently produces children's educational products.<ref>http://www.asder.com/</ref>
   
==History==
+
== History ==
 
=== Early history ===
 
 
[[File:NTDEC Life Force.jpg|right|thumb|Pirate copy of Life Force with the copyright crediting NTDEC. (Salamander name on cartridge but Life Force in-game)]]
===Early history===
 
 
According to Asder's website, the company was founded in 1983, but its activities at this point were unknown. The Famicom was released the same year but widespread piracy of its games had not yet begun. It may have been involved in Atari 2600 games, or non-gaming products.
 
According to Asder's website, the company was founded in 1983, but its activities at this point were unknown. The Famicom was released the same year but widespread piracy of its games had not yet begun. It may have been involved in Atari 2600 games, or non-gaming products.
   
 
=== Piracy (1988-1991) ===
[[Image:NTDEC Life Force.jpg|thumb|right|NTDEC pirate copy of Life Force (Salamander name on cartridge but Life Force in-game)]]
 
 
NTDEC produced a large number of pirate copies of Japanese Famicom games between 1988 and 1991, which were sold worldwide. Unusually among pirate cartridge manufacturers, NTDEC cartridges are often identifiable by the company logo on the cartridge and the in-game copyright notice modified to read "NTDEC", as well as the rear label featuring a green "QUALITY GUARANTY" (sic) stripe (although this label was also used by other companies).
===Piracy (1989-1991)===
 
NTDEC produced a large number of pirate copies of Japanese Famicom games between 1989 and 1991 (and possibly earlier), which were sold worldwide. Unusually among pirate cartridge manufacturers, NTDEC cartridges are often identifiable by the company logo on the cartridge and the in-game copyright noticed modified to read "NTDEC", as well as the rear label featuring a green "QUALITY GUARANTY" (sic) stripe (although this label was also used by other companies).
 
   
 
Two NTDEC employees were arrested in 1991 for the company's activities distributing cartridges in the US, and legal action was brought against the company by Nintendo shortly after for copyright infringement, as well as its use of the "Nintendo" trademark in its company name. <ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE3D91631F936A15756C0A965958260&n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fSubjects%2fC%2fComputer%20and%20Video%20Games Companies to pay $24 Million in Nintendo piracy case] ''New York Times'', Dated May 25 1993</ref><ref>[http://openjurist.org/51/f3d/281/nintendo-of-america-inc-v-ntdec Nintendo of America Inc v. NTDEC]</ref>
 
Two NTDEC employees were arrested in 1991 for the company's activities distributing cartridges in the US, and legal action was brought against the company by Nintendo shortly after for copyright infringement, as well as its use of the "Nintendo" trademark in its company name. <ref>[http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE3D91631F936A15756C0A965958260&n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fSubjects%2fC%2fComputer%20and%20Video%20Games Companies to pay $24 Million in Nintendo piracy case] ''New York Times'', Dated May 25 1993</ref><ref>[http://openjurist.org/51/f3d/281/nintendo-of-america-inc-v-ntdec Nintendo of America Inc v. NTDEC]</ref>
   
===NTDEC original games (1991-1993)===
+
=== NTDEC original games (1991-1993) ===
Before 1991, NTDEC is only known to have released one original game, ''Pokey'' (1989). However, between 1991 and 1993, NTDEC published many more original games in Asia, some of which were distributed in parts of South America and Europe. Most of the games released in 1991 used the "Mega Soft" name, but the "Caltron" name was used for several releases in 1992, including the [[Caltron 6-in-1]]. This is possibly the most well-known of NTDEC's products as it received a release in many more countries than their previous games, including the US. Caltron itself listed a Los Angeles address and phone number on a survey card included with the game; this was presumably the address also used by the US "Mega Soft" company named in Nintendo's lawsuit. However after this point NTDEC appears to have abandoned both the Mega Soft and Caltron names, and simply used its own name in its games.
+
Before 1991, NTDEC is only known to have released one original game, ''Pokey'' (1989). However, between 1991 and 1993, NTDEC published many more original games in Asia, some of which were distributed in parts of South America and Europe. Most of the games released in 1991 used the "Mega Soft" name, but the "Caltron" name was used for several releases in 1992, including the ''[[Caltron 6-in-1]]''. This is possibly the most well-known of NTDEC's products as it received a release in many more countries than their previous games, including the US. Caltron itself listed a Los Angeles address and phone number on a survey card included with the game; this was presumably the address also used by the US "Mega Soft" company named in Nintendo's lawsuit. However, after this point NTDEC appears to have abandoned both the Mega Soft and Caltron names, and simply used its own name in its games.
   
===Asder (1993-present)===
+
=== Asder (1993-Present) ===
Nintendo's legal action of 1991 concluded in 1993 with Nintendo being awarded $24,059,062 plus attorneys fees of $108,829.00 and costs of $709.80, and a worldwide permanent injunction preventing NTDEC from infringing Nintendo's intellectual property rights. At this point the company ceased operations under the NTDEC name. However it appears to have simply renamed itself to Asder Electronic Co., Ltd, which continued to produce NTDEC's Famiclones, and released educational computer systems and TV game joypads containing Mega Soft games, as well as several original Famicom titles continuing NTDEC's CN-xx numbering.
+
Nintendo's legal action of 1991 concluded in 1993 with Nintendo being awarded $24,059,062 plus attorneys fees of $108,829.00 and costs of $709.80, and a worldwide permanent injunction preventing NTDEC from infringing Nintendo's intellectual property rights. At this point the company ceased operations under the NTDEC name. However it appears to have simply renamed itself to Asder Electronic Co., Ltd, which continued to produce NTDEC's Famiclones, and released educational computer systems and TV game joypads containing Mega Soft games, as well as several original Famicom titles continuing NTDEC's CN-xx numbering.
   
Asder is not known to have developed any original Famicom games since 1994, although it released the Famicom based PC-95 keyboard presumably in 1995, and another Famicom-based keyboard, the PC-2000, possibly in 2000.<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20010415022151/www.asder.com.tw/en/pc-2000-2.htm</ref> It currently produces educational products such as children's "laptops" with simple low-res mono LCD screens, as well as a keyboard-based plug & play TV system and its own educational game console, the "A.Smart", but the latter two systems appear to be based on a 16 or even 32 bit architecture rather than Famiclone hardware.
+
Asder is not known to have developed any original Famicom games since 1994, although it released the Famicom-based PC-95 keyboard presumably in 1995, and another Famicom-based keyboard, the PC-2000, possibly in 2000.<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20010415022151/www.asder.com.tw/en/pc-2000-2.htm</ref> It currently produces educational products such as children's "laptops" with simple low-res mono LCD screens, as well as a keyboard-based plug & play TV system and its own educational game console, the "A.Smart", but the latter two systems appear to be based on a 16- or even 32-bit architecture rather than Famiclone hardware.
   
==List of games produced by NTDEC==
+
== List of games produced by NTDEC ==
===As NTDEC/Mega Soft/Caltron===
+
=== As NTDEC / Mega Soft / Caltron ===
 
*Adam & Eve (1991) (NTDEC)
 
*Adam & Eve (1991) (NTDEC)
 
*Balloon Monster (1991) (Mega Soft, Caltron)
 
*Balloon Monster (1991) (Mega Soft, Caltron)
 
*Bookyman (1991) (NTDEC, Mega Soft) (Hack of [[Brush Roller]] by [[Hwang Shinwei]])
 
*Bookyman (1991) (NTDEC, Mega Soft) (Hack of [[Brush Roller]] by [[Hwang Shinwei]])
 
*[[Caltron 6-in-1]] (1992 (Caltron)
 
*[[Caltron 6-in-1]] (1992 (Caltron)
 
*Cosmos Cop (1991) (Mega Soft, Caltron) (CN-08)
*Chik Bik Ji Jin - Saam Gwok Ji (NTDEC)
 
*Cosmos Cop (1991) (Mega Soft, Caltron)
 
 
*Destroyer (1992) (NTDEC, Caltron)
 
*Destroyer (1992) (NTDEC, Caltron)
*Dream Fighter
+
*Dream Fighter (1993) (Asder) (CN-17)
 
*[[Fighting Hero]] (1991) (Mega Soft)
 
*[[Fighting Hero]] (1991) (Mega Soft)
*Fighting Hero III (1993) (NTDEC)
+
*[[Fighting Hero III]] (1993) (NTDEC)
 
*Go! Benny! (1992) (NTDEC, Mega Soft)
 
*Go! Benny! (1992) (NTDEC, Mega Soft)
 
*Hit Marmot (1991) (Mega Soft)
 
*Hit Marmot (1991) (Mega Soft)
Line 52: Line 51:
 
*Pokey (1989) (NTDEC)
 
*Pokey (1989) (NTDEC)
 
*Porter (1991) (Mega Soft)
 
*Porter (1991) (Mega Soft)
  +
*San Guo Zhi: Chibi Zhi Zhan (三國志-赤壁之戰) (a port of [http://capcom.wikia.com/wiki/Warriors_of_Fate Warriors of Fate]) (NTDEC) (CN-20)
 
*Sea of Dreamland (1992) (Mega Soft)
 
*Sea of Dreamland (1992) (Mega Soft)
 
*Skate Boy (1992) (Caltron)
 
*Skate Boy (1992) (Caltron)
*Super Gun
+
*Super Gun (1992) (NTDEC)
 
*Tank (1992) (NTDEC, Caltron)
 
*Tank (1992) (NTDEC, Caltron)
 
*War in the Gulf (1991) (Mega Soft)
 
*War in the Gulf (1991) (Mega Soft)
  +
===As Asder===
+
=== As Asder ===
*[[Asder 20-in-1]] (1993)<br/>Games that have so far appeared only on this cartridge and Asder Famiclones, but may have received single cart releases earlier:
+
*[[Asder 20-in-1]] (1993) Games that have so far appeared only on this cartridge and Asder Famiclones, but may have received single cart releases earlier:
**Benico
+
**Benico
**JP Ronny
 
 
**Top Hunter
 
**Top Hunter
*Cobra Mission (1994)
+
*Cobra Mission (1994) (CN-27)
*Huang Di (unknown date)
+
*Huang Di (possibly 1994)
 
*JP Ronny (1993)
*[[San Guo Zhi: Qun Xiong Zheng Ba]] (unknown date)
+
*[[San Guo Zhi: Qun Xiong Zheng Ba]] (Unknown date)
 
*Zhen Ben - Zhi You Ji (1994)
 
*Zhen Ben - Zhi You Ji (1994)
   
===Unknown===
+
=== Unknown ===
*Dragon Palace Adventure (unreleased)
+
*Dragon Palace Adventure (Unreleased)
*The Pearl Turn (listed on a Famiclone box with other Mega Soft games) [[File:The pearl turn.png|thumb|The Pearl Turn screenshot]]
+
[[File:The pearl turn.png|right|100px|thumb|The Pearl Turn screenshot.]]
  +
*The Pearl Turn (Listed on a Famiclone box with other Mega Soft games, whether it was released or not is unknown)
   
  +
{{Br}}
===Other Famicom products===
 
* NT-xx series [[Clone consoles|Famiclones]]
 
* NTDEC Stick Turbo Jr.; clone of an ASCII product
 
* Asder PC-95
 
* Asder PC-2000
 
   
 
=== Other Famicom products ===
==Related games==
 
  +
*Powerful 250 in One multicart (1991) (NTDEC)
 
*NT-xx series [[Clone consoles|Famiclones]]
 
*NTDEC Stick Turbo Jr.; clone of an ASCII product
 
*Asder PC-95
 
*Asder PC-2000
  +
 
== Related games ==
 
These have features such as fonts and the sound engine in common with NTDEC/Asder's games, and as such may have shared some development staff, but they appear to have been released by other companies.
 
These have features such as fonts and the sound engine in common with NTDEC/Asder's games, and as such may have shared some development staff, but they appear to have been released by other companies.
* Elfland (1992, credited to "Tip Top")
+
*[[Elfland]] (1992, credited to "Tip Top")
* Lethal Weapon (unknown date) (actually a port of Lethal Enforcers; unrelated to the film of the same name)
+
*Lethal Weapon (1994, credited to "Go Go") (Actually a port of Lethal Enforcers; unrelated to the film or NES game of the same name)
* All games by [[Rex Soft]]
+
*All games by [[Rex Soft]]
  +
  +
== Trivia ==
  +
*The sound effect used in the Asder intro is almost identical to one from S.C.A.T..
  +
*NTDEC originals were distributed in South Korea by Game Line.
  +
*NTDEC apparently sold Memory Controllers chips (most notably MMC3 clones) to smaller publishers in the early days. It would have been too expensive for those to produce their own.<ref>http://masterdisk.byethost15.com/blog/libg/static.php?page=ntdec-mmc</ref>
  +
*In Argentina (and maybe the rest of South America?) NTDEC had a subsidiary named ''NTD C''.
   
==References==
+
== References ==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
   
  +
{{Companies}}
==External links==
 
*[http://www.asder.com.tw/main.html Asder]
 
*[http://www.planetnintendo.com/thewarpzone/caltron.html Caltron 6 in 1]
 
*[http://www.er.uqam.ca/merlin/fd491499/nintendo/nes/megasoft/ Mega Soft games]
 
 
 
{{Wikipedia|NTDEC}}
 
{{Wikipedia|NTDEC}}
  +
[[Category:Companies from Taipei, Taiwan]]
  +
[[Category:Publishers]]
 
[[Category:Developers]]
 
[[Category:Developers]]
[[Category:Publishers]]
+
[[Category:Hardware manufacturers]]

Revision as of 18:58, 19 May 2019

NTDEC (Nintendo Electronic Co., 任天堂電子有限公司) is a company that produced pirate Famicom and NES cartridges from 1988 to 1991, and numerous unlicensed original games from 1991 onwards, although the company itself has been active since 1983. Since 1993 it has operated under the name Asder (亞斯德科技有限公司), and currently produces children's educational products.[1]

History

Early history

NTDEC Life Force

Pirate copy of Life Force with the copyright crediting NTDEC. (Salamander name on cartridge but Life Force in-game)

According to Asder's website, the company was founded in 1983, but its activities at this point were unknown. The Famicom was released the same year but widespread piracy of its games had not yet begun. It may have been involved in Atari 2600 games, or non-gaming products.

Piracy (1988-1991)

NTDEC produced a large number of pirate copies of Japanese Famicom games between 1988 and 1991, which were sold worldwide. Unusually among pirate cartridge manufacturers, NTDEC cartridges are often identifiable by the company logo on the cartridge and the in-game copyright notice modified to read "NTDEC", as well as the rear label featuring a green "QUALITY GUARANTY" (sic) stripe (although this label was also used by other companies).

Two NTDEC employees were arrested in 1991 for the company's activities distributing cartridges in the US, and legal action was brought against the company by Nintendo shortly after for copyright infringement, as well as its use of the "Nintendo" trademark in its company name. [2][3]

NTDEC original games (1991-1993)

Before 1991, NTDEC is only known to have released one original game, Pokey (1989). However, between 1991 and 1993, NTDEC published many more original games in Asia, some of which were distributed in parts of South America and Europe. Most of the games released in 1991 used the "Mega Soft" name, but the "Caltron" name was used for several releases in 1992, including the Caltron 6-in-1. This is possibly the most well-known of NTDEC's products as it received a release in many more countries than their previous games, including the US. Caltron itself listed a Los Angeles address and phone number on a survey card included with the game; this was presumably the address also used by the US "Mega Soft" company named in Nintendo's lawsuit. However, after this point NTDEC appears to have abandoned both the Mega Soft and Caltron names, and simply used its own name in its games.

Asder (1993-Present)

Nintendo's legal action of 1991 concluded in 1993 with Nintendo being awarded $24,059,062 plus attorneys fees of $108,829.00 and costs of $709.80, and a worldwide permanent injunction preventing NTDEC from infringing Nintendo's intellectual property rights. At this point the company ceased operations under the NTDEC name. However it appears to have simply renamed itself to Asder Electronic Co., Ltd, which continued to produce NTDEC's Famiclones, and released educational computer systems and TV game joypads containing Mega Soft games, as well as several original Famicom titles continuing NTDEC's CN-xx numbering.

Asder is not known to have developed any original Famicom games since 1994, although it released the Famicom-based PC-95 keyboard presumably in 1995, and another Famicom-based keyboard, the PC-2000, possibly in 2000.[4] It currently produces educational products such as children's "laptops" with simple low-res mono LCD screens, as well as a keyboard-based plug & play TV system and its own educational game console, the "A.Smart", but the latter two systems appear to be based on a 16- or even 32-bit architecture rather than Famiclone hardware.

List of games produced by NTDEC

As NTDEC / Mega Soft / Caltron

  • Adam & Eve (1991) (NTDEC)
  • Balloon Monster (1991) (Mega Soft, Caltron)
  • Bookyman (1991) (NTDEC, Mega Soft) (Hack of Brush Roller by Hwang Shinwei)
  • Caltron 6-in-1 (1992 (Caltron)
  • Cosmos Cop (1991) (Mega Soft, Caltron) (CN-08)
  • Destroyer (1992) (NTDEC, Caltron)
  • Dream Fighter (1993) (Asder) (CN-17)
  • Fighting Hero (1991) (Mega Soft)
  • Fighting Hero III (1993) (NTDEC)
  • Go! Benny! (1992) (NTDEC, Mega Soft)
  • Hit Marmot (1991) (Mega Soft)
  • Magic Block (1991) (Mega Soft)
  • Magic Carpet 1001 (1991) (Mega Soft)
  • Master Shooter (1993) (NTDEC)
  • Pokey (1989) (NTDEC)
  • Porter (1991) (Mega Soft)
  • San Guo Zhi: Chibi Zhi Zhan (三國志-赤壁之戰) (a port of Warriors of Fate) (NTDEC) (CN-20)
  • Sea of Dreamland (1992) (Mega Soft)
  • Skate Boy (1992) (Caltron)
  • Super Gun (1992) (NTDEC)
  • Tank (1992) (NTDEC, Caltron)
  • War in the Gulf (1991) (Mega Soft)

As Asder

  • Asder 20-in-1 (1993) Games that have so far appeared only on this cartridge and Asder Famiclones, but may have received single cart releases earlier:
    • Benico
    • Top Hunter
  • Cobra Mission (1994) (CN-27)
  • Huang Di (possibly 1994)
  • JP Ronny (1993)
  • San Guo Zhi: Qun Xiong Zheng Ba (Unknown date)
  • Zhen Ben - Zhi You Ji (1994)

Unknown

  • Dragon Palace Adventure (Unreleased)
The pearl turn

The Pearl Turn screenshot.

  • The Pearl Turn (Listed on a Famiclone box with other Mega Soft games, whether it was released or not is unknown)

Other Famicom products

  • Powerful 250 in One multicart (1991) (NTDEC)
  • NT-xx series Famiclones
  • NTDEC Stick Turbo Jr.; clone of an ASCII product
  • Asder PC-95
  • Asder PC-2000

Related games

These have features such as fonts and the sound engine in common with NTDEC/Asder's games, and as such may have shared some development staff, but they appear to have been released by other companies.

  • Elfland (1992, credited to "Tip Top")
  • Lethal Weapon (1994, credited to "Go Go") (Actually a port of Lethal Enforcers; unrelated to the film or NES game of the same name)
  • All games by Rex Soft

Trivia

  • The sound effect used in the Asder intro is almost identical to one from S.C.A.T..
  • NTDEC originals were distributed in South Korea by Game Line.
  • NTDEC apparently sold Memory Controllers chips (most notably MMC3 clones) to smaller publishers in the early days. It would have been too expensive for those to produce their own.[5]
  • In Argentina (and maybe the rest of South America?) NTDEC had a subsidiary named NTD C.

References

This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).