Namco Networks and Big Fish Games Partner to Launch Casual Online Games in the Mobile Market
July 22nd, 2007 Leave a comment Visited 38 times, 1 so far today
Namco Networks and Big Fish Games Partner to Launch Casual Online Games in the Mobile Market
Namco Networks, a leading publisher and developer of wireless games and network content, and Big Fish Games, Inc., a leading developer, publisher, and distributor of casual, family-friendly games, today announced a partnership to bring Big Fish’s popular online games to mobile phones in North America for the first time. The partnership kicks off with the scheduled launch of Atlantis Sky Patrol™, a casual puzzle game perfectly suited for mobile.
“As an industry-recognized leader in mobile gaming, Namco Networks provides fun, successful casual games for wireless devices and is the ideal partner to launch Atlantis Sky Patrol in the mobile market,” said Paul Handelman, Vice President of Business Development for Big Fish Games.
By combining Namco’s ongoing success and recognized quality in the mobile gaming industry with Big Fish Games’ dominance of the casual online gaming space, this partnership will further expand Namco’s already diverse catalog of popular best-selling mobile games.
“Partnering with Big Fish Games is a testament to Namco Networks unremitting commitment to bring superior mobile games to consumers,” said Scott Rubin, Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Namco Networks. “Big Fish’s games have been hugely successful in the online gaming market, and we believe this popularity will continue on mobile phones.”
In Atlantis Sky Patrol, players must knock out doomsday devices by shooting and matching chains of colored marbles moving through a track before the chain reaches a detonation core and the device explodes. To finish off the device and move onto the next round, players must destroy the cleverly-placed static marbles that continually regenerate the moving chains that fill the track. Atlantis Sky Patrol is expected to launch on North American wireless carriers in the winter of 2007.
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