(Source: Game Machine 1986/12/15, California records)
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The president of Romstar also ran Captron Software, which operated mall kiosks that sold video games (see Captron World of Nintendo). At some point, it became a subsidiary of Capcom. (Maybe it always was.)pic.twitter.com/qm04HRJXQZ
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That's from an article on game distribution in the first issue of Game Developer. https://archive.org/details/GDM_Premier_1994/page/n13 …
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Someone find the January 1995 issue of RePlay: "The article explains more about the corporate relationship between Capcom and Romstar that led to the formation of GameStar"https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.games.pinball/q4bqLujIzHM/U0_vac8F04EJ …
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For some reason, GameStar is listed as the developer of Street Fighter: The Movie for PlayStation and Saturn in Video Games & Computer Entertainment (June 1995).
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Sort of? I still haven’t been able to figure it out and I talked to someone who was there. They were a kit company that worked with several different companies who had investments in them.
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I want to know why some games from Taito, SNK, etc were released through them rather than through the US branches of said companies!
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I did wonder why Romstar published Baseball Stars 2 on the Nes instead of SNK.
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SNK's not even mentioned on it.
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