Yuji Naka

Game designer

Birthday September 17, 1965

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Hirakata, Osaka, Japan

Age 58 years old

Nationality Osaka

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Yuji Naka (中 裕司), credited in some games as YU2, is a former Japanese video game programmer, designer and producer.

1965

Naka was born on September 17, 1965, in Hirakata, Osaka.

He learned to program by replicating and debugging video game code printed in magazines.

The experience prompted him to study assemblers and practice writing code during his school classes.

After graduating, Naka decided not to enroll in university and stayed in Osaka.

1983

Around 1983, Naka saw that the video game company Sega was looking for programming assistants and applied.

1984

Naka joined Sega in 1984 and worked on games including Girl's Garden (1985) and Phantasy Star II (1989).

Following a brief interview, he began working for Sega in April 1984.

His first task was designing maps and checking floppy disks for Road Runner for the SG-1000, he could not recall if the game was released.

1985

His first major project was Girl's Garden (1985), which he and the composer Hiroshi Kawaguchi created as part of their training process.

Their boss was impressed and decided to publish the game, and it earned them notice among their peers and Japanese gamers.

However Naka felt embarrassed about his code, and did not want to release the game.

He developed games going with the flow, and did not do task management at all.

The pace of game development was 1 game every 1 or 2 months, and he was essentially living at the company; he recalled bragging with Yu Suzuki on who worked more overtime.

During the Master System era, Naka wanted to develop games that were not possible on Nintendo's Famicom.

Examples of this include the 3D dungeons of Phantasy Star and ports of Space Harrier and OutRun, which ran on powerful arcade hardware.

The Mega Drive was introduced suddenly, much like the Master System.

1988

During a visit to the 1988 Amusement Machines Show, Naka was impressed by the ability to move diagonally on slopes in a demonstration of Capcom's game Ghouls 'n Ghosts.

Hoping to recreate it, he asked his supervisors at Sega to allow him to port the game to the Mega Drive.

Capcom provided him with the source code and ROM data.

As he was developing the port, he experimented with aspects such as the speed of the main character to understand how they interacted with the environment.

He also altered the slopes and was able to create a functioning 360-degree loop.

Sprite-scaling was still a technique that Naka wanted to improve his skill on with a game called Metal Lancer, but it was cancelled halfway through development.

Sega's president Hayao Nakayama decided that Sega needed a flagship series and mascot to compete with Nintendo's Mario franchise.

1990

He was the lead programmer of the original Sonic the Hedgehog games on the Mega Drive in the early 1990s, which greatly increased Sega's market share.

1992

Naka developed Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (1992), Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (1994) and Sonic & Knuckles (1994) in California with Sega Technical Institute.

1994

It was only around the 32X's release in 1994 that Sega gave Naka information about hardware beforehand.

Super Thunder Blade was the first game he programmed for the Mega Drive.

He requested that sprite-scaling be implemented in future models of the console.

However, he was told that it was not possible at the time.

He also requested a 6Mbit cartridge for Phantasy Star II, which got through.

The Mega Drive was Naka's favourite hardware, and he said that he could have kept working on it forever just by making the clock speed faster.

1996

He returned to Japan to lead development on Sonic Team games including Nights into Dreams (1996), Burning Rangers (1998), Sonic Adventure (1998) and Phantasy Star Online (2000).

2001

After Sega left the console market in 2001, Naka remained as an executive officer, overseeing all of Sega's output.

2006

He is the co-creator of the Sonic the Hedgehog series and was the president of Sonic Team at Sega until his departure in 2006.

In 2006, Naka left Sega to found the independent game company Prope.

He joined Square Enix to direct the platform game Balan Wonderworld (2021), which reunited him with the Sonic co-creator Naoto Ohshima.

Naka was removed from the project six months before the game was released, and Balan underperformed critically and commercially.

He left Square Enix in April 2021.

In 2023, Naka was found guilty of insider trading at Square Enix.