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Grasshopper Manufacture Hires Harvest Moon And Little King's Story Creators

Yasuhiro Wada and Yoshiro Kimura, formerly of Marvelous Entertainment and responsible for Harvest Moon and Little King's Story respectively, have joined Japanese superdev Grasshopper Manufacture.

Simon Parkin, Contributor

October 14, 2010

2 Min Read
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Goichi Suda's Grasshopper Manufacture studio, responsible for the No More Heroes series, has hired Yasuhiro Wada and Yoshiro Kimura, formerly of Japanese publisher Marvelous Entertainment. Wada, credited with being the creator and head producer of the farming-cum-dating sim Harvest Moon, will serve as Grasshopper's chief operating officer. Kimura, whose most recent credit is producing the critically-acclaimed Nintendo Wii RTS Little King's Story, has been appointed chief creative officer. Grasshopper Manufacture's director Goichi Suda told Famitsu (translated by 1UP): "This move will help us produce games in a more stable manner. We haven't released a single [original] title in the past year, which is something that caused a lot of regret in my mind. Having these two people join Grasshopper will make us a more sturdily-organized company, and it'll improve our development, technical, and release skills." While Suda declined to say what the pair would be working on, he hinted that it may be a more family friendly title than the studio's traditional output. "We've been known for specializing in action games," said Suda, "but I'm positive this will help drive us to explore other genres as well. One of my goals is to make a game for all ages, and I think we've got the foundation for that now." Suda went on to explain that he wants his games to continue to appeal to westerners, something he feels the studio has already achieved despite not necessarily being developed with this goal in mind. "Grasshopper's games are enjoyed by people around the world, but they aren't necessarily geared toward the overseas market," he commented to Famitsu "They just happen to resonate with oveaseas audiences as well. I think that's because this company plays home to a great deal of different cultures that all come together to discover types of fun that everyone can share. It's not a matter of marketing toward individual countries; it's about finding the inner antenna that tells you what's fun and what isn't." Suda is currently working on Shadows of the Damned for EA in conjunction with Shinji Mikami, the XBLA/PSN shooter Sine Mora with Digital Reality and survival horror Codename D for Kinect.

About the Author

Simon Parkin

Contributor

Simon Parkin is a freelance writer and journalist from England. He primarily writes about video games, the people who make them and the weird stories that happen in and around them for a variety of specialist and mainstream outlets including The Guardian and the New Yorker.

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