Sony Headquarters is a place that first appeared in SMG4: Nintendo Gets Deleted. As the name suggests, it is the headquarters of the Japanese video game company Sony Interactive Entertainment who was famously known for PlayStation brands.
In the series, the company is portrayed as an aggressive company trying to do whatever they can to monopolize the gaming market by outdoing Nintendo and Microsoft, to the extent of raiding companies' stocks and sending cease-and-desist letters to independent video game developers to make sure they remain powerful with their first-party titles which are remarked as bad however.
History[]
SMG4: Mario's Big Chungus Hunt[]
An older version of Sony Headquarters originally appeared in this episode, with Mario slapping all of its employees and security in order to remove any competition towards the Big Chungus game.
SMG4: Nintendo Gets Deleted[]
Sony Headquarters send Solid Snake to steal Nintendo Headquarters' stonks, a mission which proves successfully, resulting in Nintendo being forced to shut down and hand over their IPs (including Mario, Luigi, Bowser and Toad) to Sony, who use them in their PlayStation games, with disastrous results for the IPs. They also start suing SMG4 for making memes about their recently-claimed properties.
Eventually, Mario and the rest of the IPs have enough of their abuse and mount a raid on the headquarters, with Mario, Luigi, Bowser and Toad heading straight for the CEO's room to defeat Spyro, fighting off Crash Bandicoot, Sephiroth, Solid Snake and Kratos in the process. They just narrowly manage to defeat Spyro and reclaim the stonks, restoring Nintendo to its former glory, while putting Sony out of business, presumably for good.
SMG4: If Mario Was In.... SQUID GAME[]
TBA.
Employee[]
- Sly Cooper receptionist
Trivia[]
- Sony along with Nintendo and Microsoft are the most notable video game companies during the console war.
- During in 1988, Sony was originally partnered with Nintendo to create a CD add-on for the SNES called "Nintendo PlayStation" until in 1992 when Nintendo rejected Sony and teamed up Philips for the CD-i console with Mario and The Legend of Zelda properties. Two years later, Sony created their own console called the PlayStation, it sold over 102 million units and beaten both Nintendo 64 with only 33 million units and Phillips CD-i earned a biggest commercial failure.