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Yu Suzuki (Japanese: 鈴木 裕 Suzuki Yū, born May 10 1958) is a prominent producer of arcade and video games.

Career


Born and raised in Iwate Prefecture, Japan, Suzuki majored in Electronic Science at Okayama University of Science.

Suzuki joined Sega Enterprises in 1983 as a programmer, and in his second year he created a simulation arcade game called Hang-On. After Hang-On, Suzuki released several hit titles such as Out Run and After Burner II.

In 1993, Suzuki created Virtua Fighter, a 3D computer graphics fighting game, which was popular when released. The Virtua Fighter series was recognized by the Smithsonian Institution as an application which made great contribution to the society in the field of art and entertainment. For the first time ever in the Japanese game industry, it became a part of the Smithsonian Institution's Permanent Research Collection on Information Technology Innovation, and is now being kept perpetually at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.

Suzuki's Shenmue for the Sega Dreamcast gave rise to a new subgenre of role-playing games, bending it away from the typical mold most games of its nature seem to fit into, with Suzuki's own concept denoted as "FREE" (Full Reactive Eyes Entertainment). The story, graphics, and the innovative system exceeded those of many previous games. Shenmue is also one of the most expensive games that has ever been developed (est. 70 million USD).

One of Suzuki's most notable arcade games was Ferrari F355 Challenge, a racing simulator created upon a strong partnership with Ferrari. The game itself drew attention not only from the gaming industry overall, but also from the automobile industry. Rubens Barrichello of the F1 Team Ferrari was quoted by Suzuki to "have considered to purchase one for practicing."

In 2003, Suzuki became the sixth person to be inducted into the Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences' Hall of Fame.

List of major works


Title Year Released Platform Role
Psy-Phi 2006 Sega Lindbergh Producer
OutRun 2 2003 Sega Chihiro Producer
Virtua Fighter 4 Final Tuned 2003 Sega NAOMI 2 Producer
Virtua Fighter 4 Evolution 2002 Sega NAOMI 2 Producer
Virtua Fighter 4 2001 Sega NAOMI 2 Producer
Propeller Arena (cancelled) 2001 Sega Dreamcast Producer
Shenmue II 2001 Sega Dreamcast Producer / executive producer
Shenmue 1999 Sega Dreamcast Producer
Ferrari F355 Challenge 1999 Sega NAOMI Producer
Virtua Cop 2 1995 Sega Model 2 Producer
Virtua Fighter 2 1995 Sega Model 2 Producer
Virtua Cop 1994 Sega Model 2 Producer
Virtua Fighter 1993 Sega Model 1 Director
Virtua Racing 1992 Sega Model 1 Producer
Turbo Outrun 1989 Sega Out Run hardware Producer
Power Drift 1988 Sega Y Board Producer
After Burner II 1987 Sega X Board Producer
Super Hang-On 1986 Sega Space Harrier hardware Producer
Out Run 1986 Sega Out Run hardware Producer
Hang-On 1985 Sega Space Harrier hardware Producer
Space Harrier 1985 Sega Space Harrier hardware Producer

References


External links


1958 births | Computer and video game designers | Japanese people | Living people | People from Iwate Prefecture

Suzuki Yū | Yu Suzuki | Yū Suzuki | Yu Suzuki | 鈴木裕 | Yu Suzuki | Yu Suzuki | Yu Suzuki

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Yu Suzuki".

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