# TATI Mixedia

> Swedish video game developer

**Wikidata**: [Q59367907](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q59367907)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/tati-mixedia

## Summary
TATI Mixedia was a Swedish video game developer founded in 1991 and dissolved in 2000. It is recorded in multiple game and archival databases and has a presence on the Swedish-language Wikipedia.

## Key Facts
- TATI Mixedia is an instance of a video game developer (a software development organization specializing in the creation of video games).
- Country of origin: Sweden.
- Inception (founding) year: 1991.
- Dissolved (abolished) year: 2000.
- Listed on the Swedish-language Wikipedia (wikipedia_languages: sv).
- Sitelink count reported: 1.
- VIAF identifier: 565149106305268492570.
- MobyGames company ID: 4375 (also recorded under former scheme "tati-mixedia").
- My Abandonware company ID: 227; Abandonware France company ID: 2151.
- Additional database identifiers: Giant Bomb (former scheme) 3010-1512; Internet Game Database company ID "tati-mixedia".

## FAQs
### Q: What was TATI Mixedia?
A: TATI Mixedia was a Swedish video game developer — a company that created video games. It is documented as having been active between 1991 and 2000.

### Q: When was TATI Mixedia founded and when did it dissolve?
A: The company was founded in 1991 and was dissolved in 2000.

### Q: Where can I find official records or listings for TATI Mixedia?
A: TATI Mixedia appears on the Swedish-language Wikipedia and in multiple game and archival databases, including MobyGames, My Abandonware, Abandonware France, Giant Bomb (former scheme), and the Internet Game Database.

### Q: What country was TATI Mixedia based in?
A: TATI Mixedia was based in Sweden.

## Why It Matters
TATI Mixedia matters as a recorded participant in the video game industry from 1991 to 2000. Its existence is preserved across several specialist databases and archival resources, which provides verifiable references for researchers, historians, and enthusiasts tracing companies and releases from that period. Being indexed in resources such as MobyGames, My Abandonware, Abandonware France, Giant Bomb, and the Internet Game Database, as well as having a Swedish-language Wikipedia entry, means that TATI Mixedia's corporate identity and output are part of the documented history of game development in Sweden. For cataloguing, preservation, or study of video game companies from the 1990s, TATI Mixedia serves as a concrete example of a small-to-medium developer with recorded metadata (founding and dissolution years, national origin, and multiple database identifiers) that aids in digital preservation and bibliographic linking.

## Notable For
- Having a defined operational period: founded in 1991 and dissolved in 2000.
- Being a Swedish-based video game developer.
- Presence in multiple game industry and archival databases (MobyGames, My Abandonware, Abandonware France, Giant Bomb, Internet Game Database).
- A VIAF authority identifier (565149106305268492570) linking it into library and authority records.
- A Swedish-language Wikipedia entry confirming a publicly accessible reference point.

## Body
### Identity and Classification
- Instance of: video game developer.
- Wikidata description: Swedish video game developer.
- Country: Sweden.

### Timeline
- Inception (founding) year: 1991 (recorded).
- Dissolved/abolished year: 2000 (recorded).

### Database and Authority Identifiers
- VIAF ID: 565149106305268492570.
- MobyGames company ID: 4375 (also appears under former scheme "tati-mixedia").
- Internet Game Database company ID: tati-mixedia.
- My Abandonware company ID: 227.
- Abandonware France company ID: 2151.
- Giant Bomb ID (former scheme): 3010-1512.

### Public and Reference Presence
- Sitelink count: 1.
- Wikipedia languages: sv (Swedish-language entry exists).

### Source Scope
- All factual elements above are derived from recorded structured properties and referenced identifiers for TATI Mixedia. No additional operational details, personnel names, product lists, or release dates were provided in the source material.

## References

1. Giant Bomb