Atelier Marie was originally published by Gust for PlayStation on May 23, 1997. An expanded version for
Sega Saturn, titled
Atelier Marie Ver. 1.3, was published by
Imagineer's publishing label Imadio on December 11. An expanded PlayStation version,
Atelier Marie Plus, was published on June 4, 1998. Imagineer ported the game to
Windows and released it on April 28, 2000. This version had network sharing capabilities until December of that year. A remake for the
Dreamcast was developed and published by Kool Kidz on November 15, 2001. The version bundled
Atelier Marie with a remake of its sequel
Atelier Ellie. The Dreamcast version released with a computer virus which would infect computers when the disc was used to access desktop features included on the disc. In response, Kool Kidz recalled the game and issued an apology to buyers. The remake bundle was released by Gust for
PlayStation 2 on October 27, 2005. The PS2 port received a fan translation in 2018. The
Plus version was released for
iOS and
Android on February 28, 2018, by then-series owners
Koei Tecmo. Until 2023, no version of
Atelier Marie was released outside Japan.
Atelier Marie Remake A high-definition remake, titled
Atelier Marie Remake: The Alchemist of Salburg, was announced in February 2023 for
PlayStation 4,
PlayStation 5,
Nintendo Switch, and Windows via
Steam. The remake was based on the expanded
Plus version with further gameplay additions alongside redone graphics. The remake was released worldwide by Koei Tecmo on July 13, 2023. A digital deluxe edition came with additional items and a translated port of the PS2 remake of
Atelier Marie. Following the increased popularity of the
Atelier series with the success of the
Atelier Ryza trilogy, series producer Junzo Hosoi wanted to make the first game accessible to new players to celebrate the series' 25th anniversary. Production began in early 2022 as development was finishing on
Atelier Sophie 2. The game was made easier by adjusting gathering and battle statistics, and introduced new social events triggered during the five year time limit. An "Unlimited Mode" was added as an accommodation to newer players, who were used to the more lax time mechanics of later
Atelier titles. The in-game character models were designed in a deformed miniature style, emulating the original in-game sprites. The character designs were redrawn by artist Benitama, and the music was arranged for the remake by
Kumi Tanioka. ==Reception==