Cheerilee seems to know what is up regarding old school Square. Yesterday, he/she corrected me that Sony did not translate FFVII, and it was actually the remnants of Ted Woolsey's team minus Woolsey. I was like "touché".
goddamn
I think one of the saddest things to see is the blatant shift in development and productivity. Games used to be announced and released within a proper timeframe.
I mean, Final Fantasy XII started in 2001 and got released in freaking 2006.
Seriously things like this should become like mini review articles or published in online journals...
Something like NeoGaf Journals.
OP you have done an amazing job!![]()
Yosuke Matsuda is the current President and has been Wada's #2 since 2001...Just finished reading those levelnth and Drek posts, damn some history lessons there. So the source of all evil is Wada. Who is the current CEO and what is his past, can he turn round the company's fortunes?
Probably not, if the company is run primarily on Japanese business principles. They're not really suited for long term success and are largely incompatible with good business due to not having enough external oversight and having a lot of group think/people unwilling to shake up the status quo.Just finished reading those levelnth and Drek posts, damn some history lessons there. So the source of all evil is Wada. Who is the current CEO and what is his past, can he turn round the company's fortunes?
Kingdom Hearts' global impact keeping SquareEnix alive
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Just finished reading those levelnth and Drek posts, damn some history lessons there. So the source of all evil is Wada. Who is the current CEO and what is his past, can he turn round the company's fortunes?
Probably not, if the company is run primarily on Japanese business principles.
How could I forget when Final Fantasy X was announced.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZwSasmakmo
Kingdom Hearts' global impact keeping SquareEnix alive
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Matsuda is almost certainly worse than Wada in every possible dimension.
Kingdom Hearts' global impact keeping SquareEnix alive
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If SE was smart, they would have struck the KH3 iron while things were actually hot, not a decade later after several side-stories with increasingly labyrinthine plots and an ever dwindling audience.
People still question this, but it is always, always a bad thing when your new CEO was the guy formerly in charge of counting the money.
Wada's bad management is a symptom of the problems with Japanese business. Michael Woodward's book on the Olympus scandal explains it pretty clearly:I think blaming "Japanese business principles" is pretty unreasonable when the proximate cause (bad management by Wada) and the background cause (demographic problems in Japan leading to leadership by terrible old people) of SE's failure are readily available.
Michael Woodward said:Of course social cohesion is a strength, and the unity derived from a we not I approach is important and to be valued. But unquestioning tribal loyalty was crippling Japans future. The real trouble was leadership. Leaders needed to challenge, make unpopular decisions, ruffle feathers. Yes, they even needed in extremes to fire people who were not achieving the grade. Many senior Japanese managers at Olympus had never fired anyone in their entire career. Dismissing people is horrible but sometimes necessary. Choosing the right people is important, but getting rid of the wrong people is probably even more important. From my experience of working with Japanese managers, many of them completely shied away from challenging weak individuals who reported to them.
Being unilateralist, confrontational, challenging all of which are required to bring about progress and improvement comes with great difficulty to a culture where harmony and cohesion are prized. Japan needs more mavericks it needs some of those old founding engineers like Soichiro Honda who went against the grain. It requires, perish the thought, a few Steve Jobs. Why had Sony Ericsson been so decisively beaten in the mobile phone market by Apple and Samsung? Where was Sonys new Walkman?
...
I reflected on these issues when in July 2012 the Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission delivered its long-awaited report to Parliament. Its opening message was that this was a disaster made in Japan. Its fundamental causes are to be found in the ingrained conventions of Japanese culture: our reflexive obedience; our reluctance to question authority; our devotion to sticking with the programme; and our insularity. It is sadly for the same four reasons that I believe much of the countrys corporate sector is doomed to failure, and that in the years ahead we will see many more stories coming out of Japan about other companies which werent quite what they appeared.
Holy shit I forgot about this :lolJuly: Wada relocates Headquarters to Yoyogi, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, - due to Wada having visited a fortune teller with several locations in mind (Nobuo Uematsu will leave because of the move)
So basically Nomura is the Yezus.
I think one of the saddest things to see is the blatant shift in development and productivity. Games used to be announced and released within a proper timeframe.
I mean, Final Fantasy XII started in 2001 and was supposed to come out in 2003 and got released in freaking 2006.
If SE was smart, they would have struck the KH3 iron while things were actually hot, not a decade later after several side-stories with increasingly labyrinthine plots and an ever dwindling audience.
People still question this, but it is always, always a bad thing when your new CEO was the guy formerly in charge of counting the money.
We have yet to see a Nomura fantasy. Have a little faith. Guch liked him enough to give him a shot, so I think we should at least see how it goes.Poor Gooch. Got sand bagged hard.
And now we must suffer through Nomura Fantasy.
Seems like another huge company killed by accountants.
And KH only exists because Guchi gave Nomura a shot. Think of how many huge franchises never saw the light of day, because Guch wasn't there to give the young and promising talent their own chance.Kingdom Hearts' global impact keeping SquareEnix alive
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We have yet to see a Nomura fantasy. Have a little faith. Guch liked him enough to give him a shot, so I think we should at least see how it goes.
And KH only exists because Guchi gave Nomura a shot. Think of how many huge franchises never saw the light of day, because Guch wasn't there to give the young and promising talent their own chance.
And yes, the lesson of today (as it always should be in regards to SE) is that Wada was basically the devil, and Matsuda (Wada's no.2 who is currently CEO) is just as bad, if not worse.
Not surprising, given how a lot of Japanese executive boards are "good old boys clubs". Executives aren't really promoted based on merit/competence past a certain level.And yes, the lesson of today (as it always should be in regards to SE) is that Wada was basically the devil, and Matsuda (Wada's no.2 who is currently CEO) is just as bad, if not worse.
Well put together, didn't know FF9,10 and 11 were announced at the same time.
Yep. And PlayOnline pretty much was too, wasn't it? Damn that thing. DAMN.
Sakaguchi leaving was the worst thing to happen to the company.
Say what you will about FF: The Spirits Within (and we all know it was a financial flop), but he had a vision for the company which was so incredible and exciting for the fans. You can feel his influence in the great PS1 games, when Squaresoft was absolutely on fire and exploring new genres and new ideas. When you compare Squaresoft's output on PS1 vs Square-Enix's output on PS2 it is a damn shame. And I don't even need to talk about last gen.
Hey! You leave PlayOnline out of this, Legacyzero! ...They had... they had... THEY HAD SOME AMAZING MUSIC! YEAH! (Which is actually true. Filter Branch and Dolphin are amazing songs.)![]()
Having worked at Square Japan from 2002-2012 this brings back memories.
Great OP.
Something else that really bothers me about Square that isn't mentioned as much is how little Square seems to values people. They're not creative assets, they're just salarymen/women. They lost Matsuno. They lost Uematsu over something SO arbitrary. They need a fall-man so here's Sakaguchi on a silver plater. I remember an interview with Nomura asking something in the area of being well-known for birthing certain characters, but Nomura's reply is that he doesn't see himself that way and that within the company he's just another employee.
Actually I just remembered this post:
Pretty cool we have someone like you in the thread. What did you do there? Is there anything you can speak to as far as the company's culture toward it's employees? Especially how it treats those who influence the creative direction of their games? We've seen so many talented people from Square's glory days fall by the wayside seemingly without any thought given to them.