Melbourne House: Difference between revisions

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Logo descriptions by logoboy95, EnormousRat, and anex407
{{PageCredits|description=logoboy95, EnormousRat and anex407|capture=EnormousRat|video=EnormousRat}}
Logo captures by EnormousRat


===Background===
Background: Melbourne House was a video game company that began in 1977. The same year [[Beam Software (Australia)|Beam Software]] was founded as the subsidiary. In 1987, Melbourne House brand was sold to Mastertronic, which used it until 1989. In 1989, Mastertronic was folded into Virgin and the Melbourne House brand was shut down. In 1996, Virgin managed to put off the brand and it was picked up by Beam Software, a former subsidiary of Melbourne House, to be used as the publishing name for some of their games. The first appearance was in 1997, but the two names were always used separately. In 1999, Melbourne House was sold to Infogrames and renamed "Infogrames Melbourne House". Beam Software soon went out of gaming business. In November 2006, Melbourne House was acquired by Krome and became "Krome Studios Melbourne", but closed down in 2010.
'''Melbourne House''' was an Australian video game company that began in 1977. The same year, [[Beam Software]] was founded as its subsidiary. In 1987, the Melbourne House brand was sold to Mastertronic, which used it until 1989, when it was folded into [[Virgin Interactive]] and the Melbourne House brand was shut down. In 1996, Virgin managed to put off the brand and it was picked up by Beam Software, the former subsidiary to Melbourne House, to be used as a publishing name for some of their games. Its first reappearance was in 1997, but the two names were always used separately. In 1999, Melbourne House was sold to [[Infogrames]] and was renamed "'''Infogrames Melbourne House'''". Beam Software soon went out of gaming business. In November 2006, Melbourne House was acquired by [[Krome Studios]] and became "Krome Studios Melbourne", but closed down in 2010.


{{SeparateTOC
|Melbourne House|
{{ImageTOC
||1st Logo (1984-1987)
|Melbourne House (1988) (From - War in Middle Earth).png|2nd Logo (1987-1989)
|Melbourne_House_(1997)_(From_-_KKND).png|3rd Logo (5 March 1997-13 October 1999)
}}
|Infogrames Melbourne House|
{{ImageTOC
|Infogrames_Melbourne_House_(2000).png|1st Logo (13-27 November 2000)
|Infogrames_Melbourne_House_(2001).png|2nd Logo (22 June 2001-8 April 2003)
|Infogrames_Melbourne_House_(2002).png|3rd Logo (22 November 2002)
|Atari_Melbourne_House_(2004).png|4th Logo (25 February 2004-13 April 2007)
}}}}


==Melbourne House==
1st Logo
===1st Logo (1984-1987)===
(Late 80s-1989)


'''Visuals:''' Usually in-credit, it shows a TV-tube shape made up of several multi-colored segments, with a large typewriter "{{font|Courier|'''M'''}}" at the bottom of it in white. No company name can be seen.
Melbourne House (1989)Melbourne House (1989)


'''Variants:'''
Nickname: "The Red Dot"
* The colors of the logo differ for each game.
* On some games, the "{{font|Courier|'''M'''}}" is bigger and only the top half of the tube is present.
* At the end of ''Redhawk'', the logo is seen in monochrome and the text "{{font|Courier|'''MELBOURNE HOUSE'''}}" is seen stacked below it.


'''Technique:''' A still, sprite-based graphic.
Logo: There's a 3D-border shield made of stone. It can be light brown or grey. A red dot lies on the shield, designed as a 3D object. Below the dot, we can read "MELBOURNE HOUSE".


'''Audio:''' None or the opening theme of the game.
FX/SFX: None.


'''Availability:''' Seen on several C64 and ZX Spectrum games from the time, like ''Gyroscope'', ''Rock N Wrestle'', and ''The Shadows of Mordor''.
Music/Sounds: None.


===2nd Logo (1987-1989)===
Availability: Rare. It's seen on War in Middle-Earth and Obliterator, among other games, mainly for Amiga.
<gallery mode=packed heights=200>
Melbourne House (1988) (From - War in Middle Earth).png
</gallery>


'''Visuals:''' On a black background, a beveled {{color|grey|stone grey}} rectangle is seen with a coarse texture, with a large {{color|red}} sphere embedded into the top of it. Below, the text "{{font|Times|'''MELBOURNE {{big|HOUSE}}'''}}" can be seen stacked below it.
Editor's Note: None.


'''Variant:''' Sometimes, the logo can be seen in-credit.


'''Technique:''' A still pre-rendered image.


'''Audio:''' None.
2nd Logo
(1997-1999)
Melbourne House (1997)Melbourne House (1998)


'''Availability:''' First seen on ''Roadwars'' for the Amiga, and can be seen on the PC versions of ''Magic Johnson's Fast Break'', ''Xenon'', ''War In Middle Earth'', among others.


===3rd Logo (5 March 1997-13 October 1999)===
Nicknames: "The Waking Television Eye"
<gallery mode=packed heights=200>
Melbourne House (1997) (From - KKND).png
Melbourne House (1998) (From - Dethkarz).png
Melbourne House (1998) (From - KKnD2 Krossfire for PC).png
</gallery>
{{YouTube|id=Xci0CGcxPJU|id2=i5tG4tvUdiA}}


'''Visuals:''' Starting off on a screen filled with static, it zooms out to reveal a {{color|darkblue|dark blue}} eye, with the static inside of a TV that acts like the iris. Above it, 5 {{color|darkblue|dark blue}} lashes are seen with the 3rd and 4th lashes being {{color|gold}} and {{color|red}} respectively, and "{{color|darkblue|{{font|Times|Melbourne House}}}}" is seen below. The eye then blinks, turning the static screen {{color|darkblue|dark blue}}. Everything casts a shadow.
Logo: The screen is full of white noise. The camera zoom out and we see the blue drawn eye with the TV in his eyeball. There are five eyelashes, two of them being red and yellow. Under the eye, the text is "Melbourne House". The whole picture is 3D.


'''Variants:'''
FX/SFX: The static noise.
* On ''KKND2: Krossfire'', the entire logo is recreated in CGI. After the normal animation occurs, 4 bullet holes appear around the eye as it looks in surprise, with the static returning in the eye as result. It then grows a pair of legs and arms, puts a match in its "mouth", and pulls out a pair of guns to shoot back at whatever's off-screen.
* An later version has the logo altered to be a {{color|blue|brighter blue}} color, the eye is smaller and more smooth in appearance (without a screen either), and the text moved to the bottom while also becoming larger. The animation is changed to have the name fade in below first, followed by the eye appearing by a slight shine to it.
** On ''Dethkarz'', the eye is shown in full 3D and on a full set of wheels, driving on-screen before stopping and blinking once. It then drives around the reflective room before skidding out and cross-fading to the final result, with a ding for the shine appearing.


'''Technique:''' 2D animation. CGI for the variants.
Variants:
In KKND: Krossfire, the eye is being shot. After this, it makes arms and legs and starts to shoot back.
In Dethkarz, the eye has four wheels and ride all over the screen before bumping into its normal position.
There's a version with no 3D.


'''Audio:''' The sound of static plays throughout as a drone plays for the logo zooming out, and a chime for the logo blinking. The variants have extra sound effects correlating with the actions, and the later version has no static.
Music/Sounds: TBA.


Availability: Used in Dethkarz, GP 500 and in KKND game series.
'''Availability:''' Seen on ''Dethkarz'', ''GP 500'' and on the ''KKND'' game series.


==Infogrames Melbourne House==
Editor's Note: None.
===1st Logo (13-27 November 2000)===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
File:Infogrames Melbourne House (2000).png
</gallery>


'''Visuals:''' On a white surface illuminated by a spotlight, the Infogrames shield is seen at the top left, with "'''''{{color|blue|Melbourne House}}'''''" aligned to the right below it. At the bottom right, a {{color|blue}} armadillo with a abstract {{color|red}}/white scale pattern on its back is seen walking, with its {{color|blue}} footprints trailing from the logo.


'''Technique:''' A still 3D graphic.


'''Audio:''' None.
3rd Logo
(November 13-27, 2000)


'''Availability:''' It was only used on 2 Dreamcast games, ''Test Drive Le Mans/Le Mans 24 Hours'', and ''Looney Tunes: Space Race''.
Nicknames: "Blue Armadillo", "Indian Armadillo"
Melbourne House (2000)
Logo: On a spotlight, we see the words "INFOGRAMES Melbourne House" in white and blue respectively with "INFOGRAMES" in white inside a black curvy shape with armadillo's footsteps below it and a blue Indian armadillo with his red Indian blanket.


===2nd Logo (22 June 2001-8 April 2003)===
FX/SFX: None.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
File:Infogrames Melbourne House (2001).png
</gallery>
{{YouTube|id=DlKL_mClVMA}}


'''Visuals:''' On a white background, the camera zooms out from the back of an old-fashioned cartoon-style CRT TV monitor and pans out to reveal a pale pink short-whiskered armadillo playing video games on the TV, mindlessly hitting buttons and rocking the joystick on the (Atari 2600 reminiscent) controller on a {{color|blue}}/{{color|darkviolet|bright purple}} globe. Everything is upside-down at first, but the camera cuts to a view of a kangaroo copying the same deed the armadillo is currently doing, viewed right-side up. The animals sit on opposite hemispheres of the globe. The kangaroo sits on the top of the globe, and vice-versa. However, everything is upside down yet again when the stacked words "{{color|orange|'''MELBOURNE HOUSE'''}}" in an odd cartoon font appear over it, each word going around the globe from opposite directions. Suddenly, the animals freeze and look at the screen frighteningly, as the globe rotates 180 degrees and change poles. After the animals blink a couple times, the "{{color|orange|'''MELBOURNE HOUSE'''}}" text revolves around the world (a la the [[Universal Pictures]] logo) and the text "{{color|orange|'''INFOGRAMES'''}}", in the same style behind the globe, joins in. Despite this, the animals continue playing on their consoles until the logo fades out.
Music/Sounds: None.


'''Technique:''' CGI.
Availability: It was only used on 2 Dreamcast games, Test Drive Le Mans/Le Mans 24 Hours, and Looney Tunes: Space Race.


'''Audio:''' The sound of tapping buttons with a bouncy cartoon synth soundtrack that stops when the animals stop and resumes when the text rotates. Comical sound effects are also included.
Editor's Note: None.


'''Availability:''' Appears on the PlayStation 2 ports of ''Le Mans 24 Hours'' and ''Space Race'' (and the PC port of the former title), and ''Men in Black ll: Alien Escape'' for the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube.


===3rd Logo (22 November 2002)===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
File:Infogrames Melbourne House (2002).png
</gallery>


'''Visuals:''' On a black background, a tire is seen spinning quickly as it zooms out and fades it, with flames beginning to line the inside of the tire, briefly turning the rims {{color|orange}}. The tire then burns some flames, with more of them appearing behind it, and the entire thing flashes to form the Melbourne House Racing logo. It features a monochrome drawing of a tire in a white box, with a {{color|red}} backing filling the rest of it. Below, "{{big|{{font|Impact|RACING}}}}" can be seen on the tire, as well as "{{font|Impact|MELBOURNE HOUSE}}}}" below in the white box.
4th Logo
(June 22, 2001-April 8, 2003)
Melbourne House (2001)


'''Technique:''' 2D computer animation.
Nickname: "Playing All-Over the Globe"


'''Audio:''' Racing car sounds, followed by a crowd cheering, which is all cut off by a cut-off "boom" noise.
Logo: On a white background, the camera zooms out from the back of a old-fashioned cartoon-style CRT TV monitor and pans out to reveal a pale pink short-whiskered armadillo playing video games on the TV,mindlessly hitting buttons and rocking the joystickon the (Atari 2600 reminiscent) controller on ablue/bright purpleglobe. Everything is upside-down at first, but the camera cuts to a view of kangaroo copying the same deed the armadillo is currently doing, viewed right-side up. The animals sit on opposite hemispheres on the globe. The kangaroo sits on the top of the globe, and vice-versa. However, everything is upside down yet again when the stacked words"MELBOURNE HOUSE" in an odd cartoon font appears over it, each word going around the globe from opposite directions Suddenly, the animals freeze and look at the text frighteningly, as the globe rotates 180 degrees and change poles. After the animals blink a couple times,the"MELBOURNE HOUSE"revolve around the world(a la theUniversal Pictureslogo) and the text "INFOGRAMES" in the same style as the"MELBOURNE HOUSE"behind the globe, joining in. Despite this, the animals continue playing on their consoles until the logo fades out.


'''Availability:''' It was only used on ''Grand Prix Challenge'' for the PlayStation 2.
FX/SFX: The animals playing their video games, the camera zooming, and the text rotating."MELBOURNE HOUSE"It's all CGI.


===4th Logo (25 February 2004-13 April 2007)===
Music/Sounds: The sound of tapping buttons with a bouncy cartoon synth soundtrack that stops when the animals stop, and resumes when the text rotates. Comical sound effects are also included.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
File:Atari Melbourne House (2004).png
</gallery>
{{YouTube|id=SsG_nrktsnY}}


'''Visuals:''' On a black background, {{color|blue}} neon lines flow through the darkness before they start to glow brightly, eventually shining brightly to fill it with {{color|dodgerblue|ocean blue}} and white as it swings to the right. The flash causes the background to turn white, and the object settles into place, revealing itself as the new Melbourne House logo. It consists of a rounded {{color|dodgerblue|ocean blue}} rectangle with a oddly-shaped "'''MH'''" in white on it, and "{{font|Century Gothic|{{color|dodgerblue|melbourne house}}}}" is seen to the bottom right of it.
Availability:Rare. It appears on 3 games, Le Mans 24 Hours for the PS2 and PC (2002 Re-Release), Space Race for PS2 and Men in Black ll: Alien Escape for the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube.


'''Technique:''' CGI.
Editor's Note: None.


'''Audio:''' An ethereal synth chime sounder with whooshes.


'''Availability:''' Seen on ''Transformers'' (the 2004 game based on the Armada series) for PlayStation 2 and the PSP and PlayStation 2 versions of ''Test Drive Unlimited''.


[[Category:Australian video game logos]]
5th Logo
[[Category:Australia]]
(November 22, 2002)
[[Category:Video game logos]]

Nicknames: "The Wheel", "Melbourne House Racing"

Logo: On a black background, we see a wheel spinning, and flames stick all over it. Eventually the screen flashes and we see the Wheel in a box inside a red background with a white box. The large white word RACING appears on bottom of the wheel, and "MELBOURNE HOUSE" appears on the bottom of that.

FX/SFX: All the animation in the logo.

Music/Sounds: Racing car sounds.

Availability: It was only used on Grand Prix Challenge for the PlayStation 2.

Editor's Note: None.



6th Logo
(2004-2007)

Melbourne House (2004)

Nickname: "MH", "Melbourne Wings"

Logo: On a black background, we see blue lines which are apart of a shape which reveals to be the MH logo in blue, then a flash happens inside the MH and the background turns white with "melbourne house" in blue appearing on the bottom of the MH. The box around it vanishes and the MH turns 2D.

FX/SFX: CGI Animation.

Music/Sounds: A Synth Sounder.

Availability: Was used on Transformers for PlayStation 2 and the PSP and PlayStation 2 versions of Test Drive Unlimited.

Editor's Note: None.

Latest revision as of 19:17, 19 March 2024


Background

Melbourne House was an Australian video game company that began in 1977. The same year, Beam Software was founded as its subsidiary. In 1987, the Melbourne House brand was sold to Mastertronic, which used it until 1989, when it was folded into Virgin Interactive and the Melbourne House brand was shut down. In 1996, Virgin managed to put off the brand and it was picked up by Beam Software, the former subsidiary to Melbourne House, to be used as a publishing name for some of their games. Its first reappearance was in 1997, but the two names were always used separately. In 1999, Melbourne House was sold to Infogrames and was renamed "Infogrames Melbourne House". Beam Software soon went out of gaming business. In November 2006, Melbourne House was acquired by Krome Studios and became "Krome Studios Melbourne", but closed down in 2010.


Melbourne House

1st Logo (1984-1987)

Visuals: Usually in-credit, it shows a TV-tube shape made up of several multi-colored segments, with a large typewriter "M" at the bottom of it in white. No company name can be seen.

Variants:

  • The colors of the logo differ for each game.
  • On some games, the "M" is bigger and only the top half of the tube is present.
  • At the end of Redhawk, the logo is seen in monochrome and the text "MELBOURNE HOUSE" is seen stacked below it.

Technique: A still, sprite-based graphic.

Audio: None or the opening theme of the game.

Availability: Seen on several C64 and ZX Spectrum games from the time, like Gyroscope, Rock N Wrestle, and The Shadows of Mordor.

2nd Logo (1987-1989)

Visuals: On a black background, a beveled stone grey rectangle is seen with a coarse texture, with a large red sphere embedded into the top of it. Below, the text "MELBOURNE HOUSE" can be seen stacked below it.

Variant: Sometimes, the logo can be seen in-credit.

Technique: A still pre-rendered image.

Audio: None.

Availability: First seen on Roadwars for the Amiga, and can be seen on the PC versions of Magic Johnson's Fast Break, Xenon, War In Middle Earth, among others.

3rd Logo (5 March 1997-13 October 1999)


Visuals: Starting off on a screen filled with static, it zooms out to reveal a dark blue eye, with the static inside of a TV that acts like the iris. Above it, 5 dark blue lashes are seen with the 3rd and 4th lashes being gold and red respectively, and "Melbourne House" is seen below. The eye then blinks, turning the static screen dark blue. Everything casts a shadow.

Variants:

  • On KKND2: Krossfire, the entire logo is recreated in CGI. After the normal animation occurs, 4 bullet holes appear around the eye as it looks in surprise, with the static returning in the eye as result. It then grows a pair of legs and arms, puts a match in its "mouth", and pulls out a pair of guns to shoot back at whatever's off-screen.
  • An later version has the logo altered to be a brighter blue color, the eye is smaller and more smooth in appearance (without a screen either), and the text moved to the bottom while also becoming larger. The animation is changed to have the name fade in below first, followed by the eye appearing by a slight shine to it.
    • On Dethkarz, the eye is shown in full 3D and on a full set of wheels, driving on-screen before stopping and blinking once. It then drives around the reflective room before skidding out and cross-fading to the final result, with a ding for the shine appearing.

Technique: 2D animation. CGI for the variants.

Audio: The sound of static plays throughout as a drone plays for the logo zooming out, and a chime for the logo blinking. The variants have extra sound effects correlating with the actions, and the later version has no static.

Availability: Seen on Dethkarz, GP 500 and on the KKND game series.

Infogrames Melbourne House

1st Logo (13-27 November 2000)

Visuals: On a white surface illuminated by a spotlight, the Infogrames shield is seen at the top left, with "Melbourne House" aligned to the right below it. At the bottom right, a blue armadillo with a abstract red/white scale pattern on its back is seen walking, with its blue footprints trailing from the logo.

Technique: A still 3D graphic.

Audio: None.

Availability: It was only used on 2 Dreamcast games, Test Drive Le Mans/Le Mans 24 Hours, and Looney Tunes: Space Race.

2nd Logo (22 June 2001-8 April 2003)


Visuals: On a white background, the camera zooms out from the back of an old-fashioned cartoon-style CRT TV monitor and pans out to reveal a pale pink short-whiskered armadillo playing video games on the TV, mindlessly hitting buttons and rocking the joystick on the (Atari 2600 reminiscent) controller on a blue/bright purple globe. Everything is upside-down at first, but the camera cuts to a view of a kangaroo copying the same deed the armadillo is currently doing, viewed right-side up. The animals sit on opposite hemispheres of the globe. The kangaroo sits on the top of the globe, and vice-versa. However, everything is upside down yet again when the stacked words "MELBOURNE HOUSE" in an odd cartoon font appear over it, each word going around the globe from opposite directions. Suddenly, the animals freeze and look at the screen frighteningly, as the globe rotates 180 degrees and change poles. After the animals blink a couple times, the "MELBOURNE HOUSE" text revolves around the world (a la the Universal Pictures logo) and the text "INFOGRAMES", in the same style behind the globe, joins in. Despite this, the animals continue playing on their consoles until the logo fades out.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: The sound of tapping buttons with a bouncy cartoon synth soundtrack that stops when the animals stop and resumes when the text rotates. Comical sound effects are also included.

Availability: Appears on the PlayStation 2 ports of Le Mans 24 Hours and Space Race (and the PC port of the former title), and Men in Black ll: Alien Escape for the PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube.

3rd Logo (22 November 2002)

Visuals: On a black background, a tire is seen spinning quickly as it zooms out and fades it, with flames beginning to line the inside of the tire, briefly turning the rims orange. The tire then burns some flames, with more of them appearing behind it, and the entire thing flashes to form the Melbourne House Racing logo. It features a monochrome drawing of a tire in a white box, with a red backing filling the rest of it. Below, "RACING" can be seen on the tire, as well as "MELBOURNE HOUSE}}" below in the white box.

Technique: 2D computer animation.

Audio: Racing car sounds, followed by a crowd cheering, which is all cut off by a cut-off "boom" noise.

Availability: It was only used on Grand Prix Challenge for the PlayStation 2.

4th Logo (25 February 2004-13 April 2007)


Visuals: On a black background, blue neon lines flow through the darkness before they start to glow brightly, eventually shining brightly to fill it with ocean blue and white as it swings to the right. The flash causes the background to turn white, and the object settles into place, revealing itself as the new Melbourne House logo. It consists of a rounded ocean blue rectangle with a oddly-shaped "MH" in white on it, and "melbourne house" is seen to the bottom right of it.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: An ethereal synth chime sounder with whooshes.

Availability: Seen on Transformers (the 2004 game based on the Armada series) for PlayStation 2 and the PSP and PlayStation 2 versions of Test Drive Unlimited.

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