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Nintendo Cube
Video game developer

Nintendo Cube Co., Ltd., formerly NDcube, is a Japanese video game developer and a subsidiary of Nintendo based in Japan with offices in Tokyo and Sapporo. Most of the company is made up of former employees of Hudson Soft. They have also been the developers of the Mario Party series since Mario Party 9 onwards.

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History

The company was founded on March 1, 2000, as NDcube, as a joint venture between Nintendo and the biggest advertising firm in Japan called Dentsu, hence the "ND" (Nintendo-Dentsu) in the name. Nintendo had 78% of the shares of the company at the time, while 13.3% of the shares were owned by Dentsu and the rest of the 8.7% were owned by other shareholders.2

In 2010, Nintendo decided to buy out the company's shares from Dentsu and the other shareholders, being then the major shareholder on the company, with its changing from 78% to 96% initially, to 97% in 2015, and since 2023, to 99% of the shares.345

Since 2010, many employees from Hudson Soft migrated to a restructured NDcube, which is also head by Hidetoshi Endo, a former president at Hudson Soft that assumed NDcube at the end of the 2000s.6

In 2019, the director of the Mario Party series since its Hudson Soft days, Shuichiro Nishiya, became the company's president in the place of Hidetoshi Endo, who was the president of NDcube for almost ten years.7

In 2024, NDcube was renamed to Nintendo Cube.8

Games

List of video games developed by Nintendo Cube
YearTitlePlatform(s)
2001F-Zero: Maximum VelocityGame Boy Advance
EZ-Talk Shokyuuhen series
Dokodemo Taikyoku Yakuman Advance
2002Card Party
Pool EdgeGameCube
2003Tube Slider
2010Wii PartyWii
2011Wii Play: Motion
2012Mario Party 9
2013Wii Party UWii U
Mario Party: Island TourNintendo 3DS
2015Mario Party 10Wii U
Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival9
2016Mario Party: Star RushNintendo 3DS
2017Mario Party: The Top 100
Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp10Android, iOS
2018Super Mario PartyNintendo Switch
2020Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics
2021Mario Party Superstars
2023Everybody 1-2-Switch!11
2024Super Mario Party Jamboree
Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp CompleteAndroid, iOS

Notes

References

  1. Japanese: ニンテンドーキューブ株式会社, Hepburn: NintendōKyūbu Kabushiki Gaisha /wiki/Japanese_language

  2. "Nd Cube flatline". IGN. August 22, 2000. Retrieved January 28, 2010. http://cube.ign.com/articles/080/080452p1.html

  3. Pearson, Dan (August 26, 2010). "ND Cube now officially a subsidiary of Nintendo". Gamesindustry. Retrieved January 9, 2021. https://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2010-08-26-nd-cube-now-officially-a-subsidiary-of-nintendo

  4. NE, Brian (June 29, 2015). "Latest listing of Nintendo subsidiaries and affiliated companies". Nintendo Everything. Retrieved January 9, 2021. https://nintendoeverything.com/latest-listing-of-nintendo-subsidiaries-and-affiliated-companies/

  5. "COMPANY". エヌディーキューブ株式会社 (in Japanese). January 11, 2018. Retrieved October 30, 2023. https://www.ndcube.co.jp/company

  6. "Hudson's Ashes: A Tale of Nd Cube's Party Past - Feature". Nintendo World Report. http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/feature/35784/hudsons-ashes-a-tale-of-nd-cubes-party-past

  7. "COMPANY". January 11, 2018. https://www.ndcube.co.jp/company

  8. Scullion, Tom (September 2, 2024). "Mario Party developer NDCube has changed its name". Video Games Chronicle. Retrieved September 2, 2024. https://www.videogameschronicle.com/news/mario-party-developer-ndcube-has-changed-its-name/

  9. Co-developed with Nintendo EPD /wiki/Nintendo_EPD

  10. Co-developed with Nintendo EPD /wiki/Nintendo_EPD

  11. Co-developed with Nintendo EPD /wiki/Nintendo_EPD