Latikuu

Latikuu (also known as Latikuu Entertainment and formerly Latikuu Plastics Corporation Ltd.) is an El Kadsreian toy maker, amusement and video game company headquartered in El Kadsre City, El Kadsre.

Latukuu is known for the lines of Technic Heroes and  toys and popular franchises such as X-Land, Sento Hero, Duggman, PokaPoka!, Galo Force, Twin Tamers, Techtrex etc. along with the local distribution of 's Transformers and Thomas & Friends toys. Latikuu was also famous for their board game HotShots, which would eventually become a high-grossing video game franchise by Seymour Games and Drillimation Studios. It was founded in 1958 by Ray Kazumi and Jun Rodgers.

History
The company was founded on December 20, 1958 as Latikuu Plastics Corporation Ltd., a toymaker and amusement company. In 1973, Latikuu Plastics Corporation Ltd. was reincorporated into Latikuu Entertainment after they begin venturing into the video game industry.

In 1983, Latikuu established its film production and distribution arm Caldatite.

In September 1987, the company created a biggest-hit game X-Land, the success of the game spawn more sequels and spin-offs.

During the 1980's, while most of it's toys were created by the company itself in a Taiwanese factory in or in two local El Kadsreian factories in Sankuro and South Comoeys City, some were made by Taiwanese sub-contractors Heng Xin Industrial and Huangmin Products Company, North Korean company February 16 Children's Educational Product Factory, and Argentine company Michel Diaz Toys.

In 1990, Latikuu formed L•K Toys as a U.S. division. After the incident in the early 90's, Latikuu patented a new type of voice box in "talking toys" that couldn't be removed from the doll by the consumer, even with the methods the BLO used. This led to a 2004 report of a so-called "BLO copycat" getting injured whilst attempting to switch the voice boxes on Sagwa the Chinese Siamese Cat Talking Best Friend Sagwa and Silverwing Talking Shade Silverwing dolls produced by Latikuu.

X-Land

 * X-Land (1987: Amiga, Commodore 64, Hyper System, IBM PC, MSX2, NES, TS-UGOS, ZX Spectrum)
 * X-Land II (1989: Amiga, Hyper-System, MS-DOS, MSX2, NES, TS-UGOS)
 * X-Land III (1990: Blue King, Codear, Game Boy, Genesis, MS-DOS, NES, Handtrome, Nitrome 32, TS-UGOS)
 * X-Land IV (1992: Blue King, Codear, Game Boy, Game Gear, Genesis, Handtrome, Macintosh, MS-DOS, Nitrome 32, SNES, TS-UGOS)
 * X-Land 5 (1995: Blue King, Game Boy, Genesis, Handtrome, Macintosh, MS-DOS, Nitrome 32, SNES, Sphere Box, TS-UGOS)
 * X-Land 6 (1998: Blue King Color, Chaos, Game Boy Color, Handtrome Unity, Macintosh, Mobile phone, Nintendo 64, Nitrome Unity, PlayStation, TS-UGOS, Windows)
 * X-Land 7 (2001: Blue King Color, Game Boy Advance, GameCube, Handtrome Unity 2, Macintosh, Mobile phone, Nitrome Unity 128, PlayStation 2, Pyramid, TS-UGOS, Windows, Xbox)
 * X-Land 8 (2005: Game Boy Advance, GameCube, Handtrome Unity 3, Macintosh, Mobile phone, Nintendo DS, Nitrome Unity 256, PlayStation 2, PSP, Pyramid, TS-UGOS, Windows, Xbox, Xbox 360(2006))
 * X-Land 9 (2008: Handtrome Unity 3, iOS, Macintosh, Mobile phone, Nintendo DS, Nitrome Unity 512, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PSP, TS-UGOS, Wii, Windows, Xbox 360)
 * X-Land 10 (2010: Android, Handtrome Unity 3, iOS, Macintosh, Nintendo DS, Nitrome Unity 512, PlayStation 3, PSP, TS-UGOS, Wii, Windows, Xbox 360)