Namco Museum
0 sources
Namco Museum
Summary
Namco Museum is a series of video game compilations[1]. It draws 369 Wikipedia views per month (series_of_video_game_compilations category, ranking #2 of 6).[2]
Key Facts
- Namco Museum's instance of is recorded as series of video game compilations[3].
- Namco Museum's publisher is recorded as Namco[4].
- Namco Museum's publisher is recorded as Bandai Namco Entertainment[5].
- Namco Museum's genre is recorded as arcade[6].
- Namco Museum's logo image is recorded as Namco Museum logo.png[7].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as Now Production[8].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as Tose Co.[9].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as Namco[10].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as Mass Media Inc.[11].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as M2[12].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as Bandai Namco Entertainment[13].
- Namco Museum's developer is recorded as Gotch Technology Corp.[14].
- Namco Museum's Commons category is recorded as Namco Museum[15].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as Game Boy Advance[16].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as Q48263[17].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as Q132020[18].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as Q10680[19].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as PlayStation 3[20].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as Q10677[21].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as PlayStation Portable[22].
- Namco Museum's platform is recorded as Q184198[23].
- Namco Museum's game mode is recorded as multiplayer video game[24].
- Namco Museum's game mode is recorded as single-player video game[25].
- Namco Museum's distribution format is recorded as ROM cartridge[26].
- Namco Museum's country of origin is recorded as Japan[27].
Body
Designation and Status
Namco Museum's instance of is recorded as series of video game compilations[3].
Why It Matters
Namco Museum draws 369 Wikipedia views per month (series_of_video_game_compilations category, ranking #2 of 6).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]