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Tomy

Tomy Company, Ltd.[1] (株式会社タカラトミー, Kabushikigaisha Takara Tomī), trading as Takara Tomy in Asia and Tomy elsewhere, is a Japanese toy company. It was established in 1924 by Eiichirō Tomiyama as Tomiyama Toy Manufacturing Company (富山玩具製作所), became known for creating popular toys like the B-29 friction toy and luck-based game Pop-up Pirate. In 2006, Tomy merged with another toy manufacturer, Takara, and although the English company name remained the same, it became Takara Tomy in Asia. It has its headquarters in Katsushika, Tokyo.

Tomy Company, Ltd.[1]
Headquarters in Katsushika, Tokyo
Takara Tomy (mostly in Japan and Asia)
Tomy (mostly in Western countries)
Native name
株式会社タカラトミー
Kabushikigaisha takara tomī
Company typePublic
TYO: 7867
Industry
Predecessor
FoundedMarch 1, 2006; 17 years ago (2006-03-01) (original Tomy, 1924; former Takara, 1955)
Headquarters7-9-10, Tateishi, Katsushika, Tokyo, Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsDetails
Revenue ¥154,804 million (FY 2013–2014)[2]
¥3,335 million (FY 2013–2014)[2]
¥8,929 million (FY 2013–2014)[2]
Total assets ¥156,467 million (FY 2013–2014)[2]
Total equity ¥50,907 million (FY 2013–2014)[2]
OwnerTomiyama family through Tsukasa Fudōsan KK (7.94%)
Number of employees
509 (as of March 31, 2019)[3]
DivisionsTomy International, Inc.
Tomy (Hong Kong) Ltd.
T-ARTS KOREA Company, Ltd.
Tomy (Thailand) Ltd.
Tomy (Shenzhen) Ltd.
Tomy Southeast Asia (Philippines) Ltd.
Tomy Asia (Taiwan) Ltd.
SubsidiariesT-ARTS Company, Ltd.
Penny Company, Ltd.
Tomy Tec Co., Ltd.
Tinkerbell Inc.
Wako Company, Ltd.
Tomy Marketing Company, Ltd.
Kiddy Land Co., Ltd.
T-ENTAMEDIA Company, Ltd.
Tomy Ibis., Ltd.
Websitetakaratomy.co.jp

History and corporate name edit

Before the merger edit

The company was named Tomy as an abridgement of Tomiyama, which was the founder's surname. Starting as a manufacturer, Tomy had the largest product development team in the toy industry and plaudits for its technology. Nonetheless, by its third generation, president Mikitaro Tomiyama decided to streamline the company to be more competitive with wholesaler Bandai. Bandai developed its products more quickly, which was more appealing to television properties that required a fast turnaround. Despite internal and external opposition, Tomiyama was determined to aggressively pursue TV licenses such as Akakage, Giant Robo and Osomatsu-kun.

Tomiyama was shocked when his son told him that Tomy's toys were bad and that he wanted to work for Bandai when he grew up. In response, he created the moderately successful Zettai Muteki Raijin-Oh, then Genki Bakuhatsu Ganbaruger, but the product development team followed these with Nekketsu Saikyō Go-Saurer, which was a catastrophic failure. It became common wisdom within the industry that Tomy couldn't support a multimedia franchise.[citation needed] However, Tomy established a relationship with Shogakukan and created the successful Wedding Peach and Let's & Go.

Tomy learned about the growing popularity of Pokémon through monthly CoroCoro Comic and obtained the commercial rights. Bandai at the time was busy with its big hit, Tamagotchi, and was not interested in Pokémon. Tomy acquired the rights to commercialize a wide range of merchandise, mainly toys, and released the "Monster Collection" of figures next year. The anime became a huge hit, and sales of related products doubled. Tomy, who had been the third largest company in the toy industry since the 1980s, rose to second place in 1997.[citation needed]

In 2001, competitor Takara's hit franchise, Beyblade, and Pokémon's slump saw Takara regaining second place and Tomy falling again to third. However, Beyblade subsequently faltered, which adversely affected Takara's fortunes; Tomy merged with the suffering company and became Takara–Tomy.[citation needed]

After the merger edit

 
The former "Tomy" brandname, used outside of Asia

The company decided to use the name "Tomy" in international subsidiaries, and "Takara-Tomy" in Japan, because Tomy had built considerable international brand recognition while Takara's products (Microman, Transformers, Battle Beasts, Beyblade, B-Daman etc.) had been sold and branded by other toy companies such as Hasbro. Additionally, the financial cost of rebranding was prohibitive.[4]

In Western media, the Takara–Tomy merger was typically characterised as a 'takeover' of Takara by Tomy, likely because several years of losses had put Takara in a financially weakened state at the time of the merger (although Takara did have significantly higher sales than Tomy). However, the companies' management teams had previously discussed merging, including at times when Takara appeared stronger. Under Japanese corporate law, the move was a merger of both companies on an equal basis.

Post-merger media speculation about the control of brands from the Takara–Tomy merger arose from the new use of a "TOMY" copyright on all packaging, including former Takara brands shipped by Hasbro, but this was merely a consequence of the decision to use only the Tomy name in international subsidiaries. In Japan, Takara-Tomy continues to use both Tomy and Takara as distinct brand names on toy ranges which originated in each separate company, and most new toy ranges or stand-alone products now carry the new Takara–Tomy brand.

Takara purchased a majority stake in Tatsunoko Production in June 2005. The studio then became a full subsidiary of Takara–Tomy following the March 2006 merger[citation needed] until Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings bought majority of Tatsunoko's stake and is now majorly owned by it affiliate company Nippon TV. Tomy UK was founded in 1982 for the sale and distribution of Tomy products in Europe, and it has successfully brought toys such as Zoids, and games like Pop-up Pirate, to the West. Tomy UK's slogan has traditionally been "Trust Tomy". In 2006, Tomy UK launched a website on which consumers can buy online from Tomy's catalogue.[5] In early 2011, Takara-Tomy acquired RC2 Corporation and the RC2 sub-brand Learning Curve, which included The First Years, Lamaze, and Compass.[citation needed]

Products edit

 
The Tomy Pocket Game Shooting Gallery was manufactured in 1978.[6]
 
The Tomy Tutor, a 16-bit home computer released by Tomy beginning in 1982

Takara-Tomy has manufactured a broad range of products based on its own properties which include, from the Tomy side: Tomica, Plarail, Zoids, Idaten Jump, Nohohon Zoku and Tomy branded baby care products, and, from the Takara side: Space Pets, Choro-Q (also known as Penny Racers), Transformers, B-Daman, Koeda-chan (also known as Treena) and Microman. The merged Takara-Tomy also produces and/or sells a wide variety of toy and game brands under license, such as Thomas & Friends, Disney, Astro Boy, Pokémon, Beyblade, Duel Masters, Naruto, The Game of Life (also known as Jinsei Game), Rockman (a.k.a. Mega Man), Wedding Peach, Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch, My Hero Academia, Cardcaptor Sakura, Cardcaptor Sakura: Clear Card, Slayers, Revolutionary Girl Utena, Kirarin Revolution, Sugarbunnies and Animal Crossing. Tomy's rights to these licenses vary by region. One of the first examples of product synergy for the merged company was the combining of Takara's Jinsei Game (Game of Life) license and Tomy's Pokémon license to produce a Pokémon Jinsei Game.

Tomy sells many products worldwide, including baby and pre-school toys, baby monitors, mechanical and electronic games, consumer electronics, children's arts and crafts products, and a vast range of toys suited to girls or boys. They make a large selection of Disney, Pokémon and Thomas the Tank Engine merchandise. They also publish video games in Japan (mostly based on Zoids and Naruto anime series), and are responsible for the distribution of some Hasbro products in Japan, such as Play-Doh, Jenga and Monopoly. The company was formerly responsible for distribution of the My Little Pony products in Japan before Bushiroad acquired the distribution rights to them starting with the franchise's Friendship Is Magic line (though the animated television series was owned by Hasbro). Later in 2015, after Bushiroad disowned the distribution rights, Sega Toys reacquired the rights to all generations of the franchise before selling the rights back to Hasbro.[citation needed]

A list of notable products include:

 
The Tomy Blip was a mechanical Pong handheld released in the 1970s.
 
A handheld variant of Pac-Man from 1981. It was sold as Puck Man in Japan, the Japanese name of the game, on other markets as Pac-Man, Pac Man or Munchman (UK).
 
Tomica toys

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Company profile".
  2. ^ a b c d e "Consolidated financial statement for end of the fiscal year ending March 31, 2014" (PDF). Tomy Co., Ltd. 12 December 2014.
  3. ^ "Corporate Profile|Corporate Information|TOMY Company, Ltd". Takaratomy.co.jp. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  4. ^ "Corporate History|Corporate Information|TOMY Company, Ltd". www.takaratomy.co.jp. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  5. ^ "Tomy Uk". Tomy.co.uk. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  6. ^ Masters, James. "TOMY Pocket Games - The USA List". Masters.me.uk. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  7. ^ "I-Sobot". Isobotrobot.com. Retrieved 22 August 2015.
  8. ^ Coopee, Todd (16 May 2016). "Water Games from TOMY (1976)". ToyTales.ca.

External links edit

  • Official website   (in English)
  • Tomy International

tomy, confused, with, thomy, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. Not to be confused with Thomy This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tomy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message It has been suggested that portions about the pre merger history of Tomy be split out into another article titled Tomy 1924 2006 Discuss April 2023 Tomy Company Ltd 1 株式会社タカラトミー Kabushikigaisha Takara Tomi trading as Takara Tomy in Asia and Tomy elsewhere is a Japanese toy company It was established in 1924 by Eiichirō Tomiyama as Tomiyama Toy Manufacturing Company 富山玩具製作所 became known for creating popular toys like the B 29 friction toy and luck based game Pop up Pirate In 2006 Tomy merged with another toy manufacturer Takara and although the English company name remained the same it became Takara Tomy in Asia It has its headquarters in Katsushika Tokyo Tomy Company Ltd 1 Headquarters in Katsushika TokyoTrade nameTakara Tomy mostly in Japan and Asia Tomy mostly in Western countries Native name株式会社タカラトミーRomanized nameKabushikigaisha takara tomiCompany typePublicTraded asTYO 7867IndustryToysVideo gamesChildren s products and apparelPredecessorTomy Company Ltd original Takara Co Ltd FoundedMarch 1 2006 17 years ago 2006 03 01 original Tomy 1924 former Takara 1955 Headquarters7 9 10 Tateishi Katsushika Tokyo JapanArea servedWorldwideKey peopleKantaro Tomiyama chairman Kazuhiro Kojima president amp CEO ProductsDetailsRevenue 154 804 million FY 2013 2014 2 Operating income 3 335 million FY 2013 2014 2 Net income 8 929 million FY 2013 2014 2 Total assets 156 467 million FY 2013 2014 2 Total equity 50 907 million FY 2013 2014 2 OwnerTomiyama family through Tsukasa Fudōsan KK 7 94 Number of employees509 as of March 31 2019 3 DivisionsTomy International Inc Tomy Hong Kong Ltd T ARTS KOREA Company Ltd Tomy Thailand Ltd Tomy Shenzhen Ltd Tomy Southeast Asia Philippines Ltd Tomy Asia Taiwan Ltd SubsidiariesT ARTS Company Ltd Penny Company Ltd Tomy Tec Co Ltd Tinkerbell Inc Wako Company Ltd Tomy Marketing Company Ltd Kiddy Land Co Ltd T ENTAMEDIA Company Ltd Tomy Ibis Ltd Websitetakaratomy co jp Contents 1 History and corporate name 1 1 Before the merger 1 2 After the merger 2 Products 3 References 4 External linksHistory and corporate name editBefore the merger edit The company was named Tomy as an abridgement of Tomiyama which was the founder s surname Starting as a manufacturer Tomy had the largest product development team in the toy industry and plaudits for its technology Nonetheless by its third generation president Mikitaro Tomiyama decided to streamline the company to be more competitive with wholesaler Bandai Bandai developed its products more quickly which was more appealing to television properties that required a fast turnaround Despite internal and external opposition Tomiyama was determined to aggressively pursue TV licenses such as Akakage Giant Robo and Osomatsu kun Tomiyama was shocked when his son told him that Tomy s toys were bad and that he wanted to work for Bandai when he grew up In response he created the moderately successful Zettai Muteki Raijin Oh then Genki Bakuhatsu Ganbaruger but the product development team followed these with Nekketsu Saikyō Go Saurer which was a catastrophic failure It became common wisdom within the industry that Tomy couldn t support a multimedia franchise citation needed However Tomy established a relationship with Shogakukan and created the successful Wedding Peach and Let s amp Go Tomy learned about the growing popularity of Pokemon through monthly CoroCoro Comic and obtained the commercial rights Bandai at the time was busy with its big hit Tamagotchi and was not interested in Pokemon Tomy acquired the rights to commercialize a wide range of merchandise mainly toys and released the Monster Collection of figures next year The anime became a huge hit and sales of related products doubled Tomy who had been the third largest company in the toy industry since the 1980s rose to second place in 1997 citation needed In 2001 competitor Takara s hit franchise Beyblade and Pokemon s slump saw Takara regaining second place and Tomy falling again to third However Beyblade subsequently faltered which adversely affected Takara s fortunes Tomy merged with the suffering company and became Takara Tomy citation needed After the merger edit nbsp The former Tomy brandname used outside of AsiaThe company decided to use the name Tomy in international subsidiaries and Takara Tomy in Japan because Tomy had built considerable international brand recognition while Takara s products Microman Transformers Battle Beasts Beyblade B Daman etc had been sold and branded by other toy companies such as Hasbro Additionally the financial cost of rebranding was prohibitive 4 In Western media the Takara Tomy merger was typically characterised as a takeover of Takara by Tomy likely because several years of losses had put Takara in a financially weakened state at the time of the merger although Takara did have significantly higher sales than Tomy However the companies management teams had previously discussed merging including at times when Takara appeared stronger Under Japanese corporate law the move was a merger of both companies on an equal basis Post merger media speculation about the control of brands from the Takara Tomy merger arose from the new use of a TOMY copyright on all packaging including former Takara brands shipped by Hasbro but this was merely a consequence of the decision to use only the Tomy name in international subsidiaries In Japan Takara Tomy continues to use both Tomy and Takara as distinct brand names on toy ranges which originated in each separate company and most new toy ranges or stand alone products now carry the new Takara Tomy brand Takara purchased a majority stake in Tatsunoko Production in June 2005 The studio then became a full subsidiary of Takara Tomy following the March 2006 merger citation needed until Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings bought majority of Tatsunoko s stake and is now majorly owned by it affiliate company Nippon TV Tomy UK was founded in 1982 for the sale and distribution of Tomy products in Europe and it has successfully brought toys such as Zoids and games like Pop up Pirate to the West Tomy UK s slogan has traditionally been Trust Tomy In 2006 Tomy UK launched a website on which consumers can buy online from Tomy s catalogue 5 In early 2011 Takara Tomy acquired RC2 Corporation and the RC2 sub brand Learning Curve which included The First Years Lamaze and Compass citation needed Products edit nbsp The Tomy Pocket Game Shooting Gallery was manufactured in 1978 6 nbsp The Tomy Tutor a 16 bit home computer released by Tomy beginning in 1982Takara Tomy has manufactured a broad range of products based on its own properties which include from the Tomy side Tomica Plarail Zoids Idaten Jump Nohohon Zoku and Tomy branded baby care products and from the Takara side Space Pets Choro Q also known as Penny Racers Transformers B Daman Koeda chan also known as Treena and Microman The merged Takara Tomy also produces and or sells a wide variety of toy and game brands under license such as Thomas amp Friends Disney Astro Boy Pokemon Beyblade Duel Masters Naruto The Game of Life also known as Jinsei Game Rockman a k a Mega Man Wedding Peach Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch My Hero Academia Cardcaptor Sakura Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card Slayers Revolutionary Girl Utena Kirarin Revolution Sugarbunnies and Animal Crossing Tomy s rights to these licenses vary by region One of the first examples of product synergy for the merged company was the combining of Takara s Jinsei Game Game of Life license and Tomy s Pokemon license to produce a Pokemon Jinsei Game Tomy sells many products worldwide including baby and pre school toys baby monitors mechanical and electronic games consumer electronics children s arts and crafts products and a vast range of toys suited to girls or boys They make a large selection of Disney Pokemon and Thomas the Tank Engine merchandise They also publish video games in Japan mostly based on Zoids and Naruto anime series and are responsible for the distribution of some Hasbro products in Japan such as Play Doh Jenga and Monopoly The company was formerly responsible for distribution of the My Little Pony products in Japan before Bushiroad acquired the distribution rights to them starting with the franchise s Friendship Is Magic line though the animated television series was owned by Hasbro Later in 2015 after Bushiroad disowned the distribution rights Sega Toys reacquired the rights to all generations of the franchise before selling the rights back to Hasbro citation needed A list of notable products include This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Tomy Blip was a mechanical Pong handheld released in the 1970s nbsp A handheld variant of Pac Man from 1981 It was sold as Puck Man in Japan the Japanese name of the game on other markets as Pac Man Pac Man or Munchman UK nbsp Tomica toysArmatron Atollo construction toy Bakugan Battle Planet B Daman marble shooting toys Beyblade top fighting game Blip game mechanical Pong type handheld game Blythe Boggle Flash Choro Q micro toy cars Chuggington Compass Crossbows and Catapults Duel Masters trading card game franchise Eldran series Flip Flap solar powered plant Furby Gashapon vending machines Guitar Rockstar i SOBOT 7 Jenga Jenny Katekyo Hitman Reborn Flame Rumble a series of fighting games based on the manga anime for the Nintendo DS Kamiwaza Wanda Kingdom Hearts Trading Card Game Lamaze Licca Omnibot line of toy robots Plarail plastic electric train set system called Tomica World outside Japan Pop up Pirate Pretty Rhythm PriPara the successor to the Pretty Rhythm series Q steer micro radio controlled cars based on Choro Q Rummikub Screwball Scramble Shinkansen Henkei Robo Shinkalion Starriors Switch 16 Thomas and Friends Plarail Capsule Plarail Tomica and Tomix themes and preschool products Thunderbirds Tomica die cast toy Tomica Hyper Rescue Drive Head Kidō Kyukyu Keisatsu Tomica Kizuna Gattai Earth Granner Tomix the model railway brand of Tomytec a subsidiary of Takara Tomy Tomy Tutor home computer Tomytronic 3D handheld game series Transformers Tron action figures and vehicles based on the Disney film Teletubbies Wedding Peach Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch My Hero Academia Cardcaptor Sakura Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card Slayers Revolutionary Girl Utena Z Knights line of constructible models of humanoid robots styled after knights that ran from 1991 to 1993 Zoids Zootopia Water Games 8 References editSome of this section s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message a b Company profile a b c d e Consolidated financial statement for end of the fiscal year ending March 31 2014 PDF Tomy Co Ltd 12 December 2014 Corporate Profile Corporate Information TOMY Company Ltd Takaratomy co jp Retrieved 22 August 2015 Corporate History Corporate Information TOMY Company Ltd www takaratomy co jp Retrieved 14 March 2016 Tomy Uk Tomy co uk Retrieved 22 August 2015 Masters James TOMY Pocket Games The USA List Masters me uk Retrieved 22 August 2015 I Sobot Isobotrobot com Retrieved 22 August 2015 Coopee Todd 16 May 2016 Water Games from TOMY 1976 ToyTales ca External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to TAKARA TOMY Official website nbsp in English Tomy International Portals nbsp Companies nbsp Japan nbsp Tokyo nbsp Toys nbsp Anime and manga nbsp 1920s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tomy amp oldid 1205846060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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