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Words near each other
・ Ultra Dome
・ Ultra Electro
・ Ultra Electro (album)
・ Ultra Electro 2
・ Ultra Electro 3
・ Ultra Electronics
・ Ultra Europe
・ Ultra Fast Attack Craft
・ Ultra Fast Rendering
・ Ultra Feel
・ Ultra Fight
・ Ultra Fight Victory
・ Ultra Food & Drug
・ Ultra Fractal
・ Ultra Galaxy Mega Monster Battle
Ultra Games
・ Ultra Girl (band)
・ Ultra Golf
・ Ultra Hal Assistant
・ Ultra Hand
・ Ultra high frequency
・ Ultra High Frequency (band)
・ Ultra high-net-worth individual
・ Ultra Hit Tracks
・ Ultra Hits
・ Ultra house
・ Ultra Idemitsujin
・ Ultra Jump
・ Ultra Large Format
・ Ultra League


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Ultra Games : ウィキペディア英語版
Ultra Games

Ultra Software Corporation was a shell corporation and publishing label created in 1988 as a subsidiary of Konami of America, in an effort to get around Nintendo of America's strict licensing rules for the North American Konami release games for Nintendo consoles. One of these rules was that a third-party company could only publish up to five games per year for the Nintendo Entertainment System in the US. This was hardly convenient for Konami, which had begun releasing more than ten games a year for both the Family Computer and Family Computer Disk System in Japan. With a greater library than they were allowed to localize, Konami formed the Ultra Games brand to extend their annual library to ten games a year.
Ultra's first game was the NES version of ''Metal Gear''. At first, Ultra was dedicated to localizing Konami's pre-existing software from Japan, but later they began publishing works from other companies as well. Some of Konami's most notable games released under the Ultra label include ''Operation C'' (an original Game Boy installment of the ''Contra'' series), ''Snake's Revenge'' (a sequel to the original ''Metal Gear'') and the first few ''Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'' games for the NES and Game Boy.
After the North American launch of the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Nintendo became less strict on the number of games third parties could publish. As a result, Ultra Games began losing its purpose and Konami dropped the label in 1992.
In Europe, Konami established the Palcom Software Limited subsidiary for similar purposes. Their library was similar to Ultra's (also including SNES games published by Konami itself), but the company also published games that were not released in America, notably ''Road Fighter, Parodius'', ''Crackout'', and ''Pop'n Twinbee''. The European subsidiary lasted longer than Ultra Games, until it was closed down in early 1994.
==Games published==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ultra Games」の詳細全文を読む



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