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- Mar 21, 2019


AlphaDream, developer of Mario & Luigi, files for bankruptcy
AlphaDream, the developer of the acclaimed series of Mario & Luigi RPGs for Nintendo, has filed for bankruptcy. This is a shocking development.


AlphaDream, developer of Mario & Luigi, files for bankruptcy
archived 2 Oct 2019 07:18:05 UTC

AlphaDream, the developer of the acclaimed series of Mario & Luigi RPGs for Nintendo, has filed for bankruptcy. This news comes from trusted source Japanese Nintendo, who also notes, “Company turnover was ¥300m ($2.78m) in March 2014 but the company’s debts were as high as ¥465m ($4.3m) by March 2018.” Regardless, this comes as a shocking development.
Though the company apparently existed in some form beginning in 1991, AlphaDream has existed as a video game developer since 2000, when it started as Alpha Star. Even before Mario & Luigi, the developer found its niche in RPGs with Japan-only Koto Battle: Tengai no Moribito on Game Boy Color and also Japan-only Tomato Adventure on Game Boy Advance. Although, the company dabbled in licensed Hamtaro games as well.
AlphaDream struck gold in 2003 with Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga on Game Boy Advance, taking the same general look and feel of Tomato Adventure and applying it brilliantly to Nintendo’s mascot franchise. This series, in overall tone, has been the closest thing we have ever gotten to a Super Mario RPG 2, and it has been quite well regarded by fans and critics alike. Last year, the developer was actually hiring for new projects (including for Switch), which we perhaps may never see now.
A bankruptcy isn’t the kind of news we like to report on past midnight at Nintendo Enthusiast, folks. Let’s cheer each other up by talking about our favorite moments from AlphaDream’s catalogue.
Though the company apparently existed in some form beginning in 1991, AlphaDream has existed as a video game developer since 2000, when it started as Alpha Star. Even before Mario & Luigi, the developer found its niche in RPGs with Japan-only Koto Battle: Tengai no Moribito on Game Boy Color and also Japan-only Tomato Adventure on Game Boy Advance. Although, the company dabbled in licensed Hamtaro games as well.
AlphaDream struck gold in 2003 with Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga on Game Boy Advance, taking the same general look and feel of Tomato Adventure and applying it brilliantly to Nintendo’s mascot franchise. This series, in overall tone, has been the closest thing we have ever gotten to a Super Mario RPG 2, and it has been quite well regarded by fans and critics alike. Last year, the developer was actually hiring for new projects (including for Switch), which we perhaps may never see now.
A bankruptcy isn’t the kind of news we like to report on past midnight at Nintendo Enthusiast, folks. Let’s cheer each other up by talking about our favorite moments from AlphaDream’s catalogue.
How very tragic. The Mario and Luigi RPGs hold a special place in my heart, they're a huge part of my childhood that was even able to transition into my older years as lighthearted experiences. Since Bowser's Inside Story, their quality was dipping but I didn't expect this so suddenly after they just remade their classic games on 3ds. It's a damn shame we won't see a new M&L game utilizing the Switch's power and features.

If you want to know why? It was continuing declining sales, particularly with the 3ds remake of Bowser's Inside story which is the worst selling Mario game since the Virtual Boy era in Japan, likely the final nail in the coffin.
I hope all AlphaDream employees are easily able to find new work with their talent or maybe even start a new studio.
In their memory, let's remember all the good times we had playing these gems.