Game Park was a South Korean company that was founded in 1996 and went bankrupt in March 2007. It is responsible for creating the GP32 and the never-released XGP. GamePark Holdings was founded by former employees of Game Park in 2005.
Game Park operated as a South Korean publisher and developer from its founding in 1996 until it went bankrupt in March 2007. While the company has a notable history for creating the GP32 handheld console, its actual video game output on PlayPile remains very small. The site lists only 12 games associated with the studio, with 12 released as a publisher and just 3 developed in-house. All of these titles appear to be from the early 2000s, specifically concentrated in the year 2002. The studio released a single game during that active period known as Tomak: Save the Earth, Again in June 2002. This title falls under the shooter genre and is available for PC on Microsoft Windows. The rest of their catalog includes a mix of other genres such as puzzle, fighting, hack and slash, quiz, platform, simulator, adventure, visual novel, and role-playing games, though specific titles for these categories are not detailed in the provided data. Their output was clearly limited, with only one game appearing across the entire decade of the 2000s in the available records. Quality trends for this publisher are difficult to assess broadly due to the scarcity of releases. The data shows a very narrow focus on a single year and a minimal number of entries. Game Park Holdings was established later in 2005 by former employees, but this new entity is separate from the original company that ceased operations in 2007. The profile suggests a brief period of activity where the company focused heavily on hardware development rather than a wide range of software titles. If you are looking for a library of games from this developer to review, you will find almost nothing available beyond that one shooter title from 2002.