Thunder Force The company's most commercially successful franchise was the
Thunder Force series. It was a series of
scrolling shooter video games. The series began with the original
Thunder Force in 1983. The games are known by fans of the genre for their hardcore appeal, pleasing graphics, and generally well composed
synthesizer-based
chiptune music soundtracks. The series' first game,
Thunder Force, appeared in 1983 on a variety of Japanese computers, such as the
Sharp X1,
NEC PC-8801 mkII, and
FM-7. Technosoft also released a
level editor, or
game creation system, entitled
Thunder Force Construction, for the original game on the
FM-7 computer in 1984. Since
Thunder Force II, the majority of installments in the series appeared on the
Mega Drive console, where the series gained much of its popularity. The most recent entry was released on
PlayStation 2.
Plazma Line port of
Plazma Line (1984), an early
first-person futuristic
racing video game. This
GIF animation of the game demonstrates early use of
3D polygon graphics and
automap feature.
Plazma Line (
プラズマライン) is a
first-person space
racing game released by Technosoft for the
NEC PC-8801 and
FM-7 computers in 1984. It is notable for being the first computer game, and home video game in general, with 3D polygon graphics. The objective of the game is to race through
outer space in a first-person view while avoiding obstacles (rendered in
3D polygons) along the way. It also featured an
automap radar to keep track of the player's position. The game was created by Kotori Yoshimura, Yoshimura later left the company in 1985 to start the development studio
Arsys Software along with fellow Technosoft member Osamu Nagano. In March 1985,
Plazma Line was ranked number five on the
Beep list of best-selling Japanese computer games.
Herzog Herzog (
German: "
Duke") is a
strategy video game released by Technosoft in Japan for the
MSX and
NEC PC-88 computers in 1988. It was a
real-time tactics and
tactical shooter game with real-time strategy elements. The series' best known entry is the
Sega Mega Drive (Genesis) title
Herzog Zwei (1989), which is sometimes regarded as the world's first
real time strategy game. Although released two years after
Nether Earth, it was the first game with a feature set that falls under the contemporary definition of the real-time strategy genre, predating the genre-popularizing
Dune II. The producers of
Dune II acknowledged
Herzog Zwei (meaning "Duke 2" in German) as an influence on the game. == Releases ==