Infogrames

Background
Infogrames Entertainment SA was founded in 1983 by Bruno Bonnell. Over the years of its existence, Infogrames became famous for many titles, including Alone in the Dark, Shadow of the Comet, and Hogs of War.

The company began to expand further in the mid-90's after applying an "Expand through Acquisition" policy, by purchasing out other companies left and square, including Ocean Software, Philips Media, Gremlin Interactive, Accolade, Beam Software, GT Interactive Software, Humongous Entertainment, Shiny Entertainment, Eden Games and Hasbro Interactive (with the MicroProse and Atari brands).

Following the rebrand of their subsidiaries under the Atari name in May 2003, Infogrames' presence was reduced to solely being a holding company that licensed out the Atari brand name from Atari Interactive. In October 2008, the company fully purchased Atari, Inc. and in May 2009, was rebranded as "Atari SA", after many financial struggles.

1st Logo (1984-1996)
Logo: Against a white background, we see a black armadillo with rainbow stripes. Below it is the word "INFOGRAMES". The logo usually fades in, stays a while, and fades out. The quality of the logo may vary on different platforms.

Trivia: The choice of an armadillo as the company's logo was because the animal "has always survived changes to its environment, from the melting of glaciers to the worst of heat waves", when the company moved to Villeurbanne.

Technique: None.

Music/Sounds: None or the opening theme of the game.

Availability: Rare, but can still be found on copies of old games from the 80s.

2nd Logo (1980's-1996)
Logo: Same as the last logo, but the colored stripes aren't as bright as before.

Variant: On some North American released games, "I*MOTION" replaces "INFOGRAMES".

Technique: None.

Music/Sounds: None or the opening theme of the game.

Availability: Rare, found only on games of that period.

3rd Logo (1996-2000)
Logo: On a white background, a more stylized version of the armadillo draws itself starting from the tail (while slightly rotating anticlockwise), then the text "INFOGRAMES" fades in below.

Variants:
 * Sometimes, only the fade-in was used, and the background can be black. This can be seen on Starshot: Space Circus Fever (with the Nintendo logo) and V-Rally Edition '99, both for Nintendo 64, and the PlayStation version of Mission: Impossible.
 * A still version exists, which was spotted on pre-2000 Game Boy Color games and on DOS versions of The Adventures of Tintin: Prisoners of the Sun, Tintin in Tibet, The Smurfs, Asterix and Obelix and Spirou.
 * On Independence War - Defiance (an expansion pack to Independence War that was bundled with the base game), the animated logo appears fully in yellow and on a black background.
 * On Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time, the still logo is flat. Then it cuts to the Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment logo.
 * On Slave Zero, the words "PRESS START BUTTON" are seen under the still logo.
 * On Test Drive Off-Road 3 and Ballistic for PS1, after the logo finishes, copyright info appears below the logo. This logo is plastered by the next logo on the European version of the former, which was renamed 4X4 World Trophy.
 * On Tabaluga for GBC, the logo is still and "DEUTSCHLAND" is added below.

Technique: 2D animation enhanced with 3D effects.

Music/Sounds: A synthesized note with a faint arpeggio and whoosh in the background, then a 6-note trumpet melody, with the last note combined with an orchestral hit. There's also a synthesized buzz when the feet, rainbow "stripes" and the eye of the armadillo fade in.

Music/Sounds Variant: None or the game's opening theme for the still versions.

Availability: Uncommon.
 * The still version first appeared on Asterix & Obelix for MS-DOS. It was seen on N64 and GBC games of the era.
 * The animated version first appeared on V-Rally for the PlayStation, and appeared on most of the company's PS1, PC and early Dreamcast titles from the time. Strangely, the last game to feature this logo was the PS1 version and later copies of the PC version of Nicktoons Racing, even though the entire packaging, title screen, and GBA version feature the next logo.

4th Logo (2000-2003)
Logo: We cut from black to see a shiny black 3D line de-thickening itself on a flashing rainbow background. The line starts to wiggle and stretch (like a radio-wave), and then snap-compresses itself together like a spring. The line loosens itself to reveal a heavily spiral-stylized armadillo. The armadillo then becomes a 3D flat drawing, and the word "INFOGRAMES", in a black rectangle-like shape, fades in and zooms out in front of the logo. It lands on the logo as the background turns white. A shadow fades in below the logo, and then the entire thing cuts to black.

Variants:
 * A still version exists. Sometimes, the logo is in the print style seen on game cases by this company, though this variant on some GBA games like Backyard Baseball could have its colors inverted, with a copyright notice below.
 * Another variant has the armadillo standing on the left side of the name banner. This was mainly used for packaging.
 * On the PlayStation 2 version of Splashdown and Stuntman, only the banner appeared on the background. Then the Atari logo follows. The 2002 version of Le Mans 24 Hours uses a  background.
 * On RollerCoaster Tycoon for Xbox, the logo is inverted, still and pans from bottom to top, plastering the Hasbro Interactive logo. RollerCoaster Tycoon 2 has the logo on a white square over a black background, and pans from top to bottom.
 * For the Lyons House division, it uses the same animation, but when it ends, the armadillo fades out and "Lyons House" writes itself below the banner. It uses a droning synth after the usual music. It is followed by the Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment logo and is seen on Sheep, Dog, 'n' Wolf (or Looney Tunes: Sheep Raider in North America).
 * The logo can be seen on Ralph's TV screen in the game as an Easter egg.
 * On the GBA version of Zapper: One Wicked Cricket!, the full armadillo logo appears without the banner, which is instead below it.
 * On Titeuf: Ze Gag Machine, the banner doesn't appear at all, instead being replaced with copyright information.

Technique: CGI by Florian Perret.

Music/Sounds: Several weird whooshing and stretching sounds and a synthesized hit (most of them are from Hanna-Barbera's sound effects library), ending in a heavy synth chord reminiscent of several Cyan Worlds logos.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * The still version is silent, or may have the opening theme of the game over it.
 * On Grand Prix 4, race car sounds are heard, although if one listens closely, the original sounds are still heard.
 * On the 2014 iOS version of Pajama Sam: No Need To Hide When It's Dark Outside, the music is high pitched.
 * On the Xbox version of RollerCoaster Tycoon, the same coaster hill sound from the Hasbro Interactive variant is used.
 * On RollerCoaster Tycoon 2, a different coaster hill sound is used.
 * Ghost Vibration has the music running faster and is also higher pitched.
 * On Blue's Clues: Blue's Reading Time Activities, the still version has the tail end of the Humongous Entertainment drum roll playing over it.

Availability: Very common. Used on lots of games from this period, produced by Infogrames and/or its divisions.
 * Games branded under the Atari name however (such as Enter the Matrix) do not have this logo (except for Ghost Vibration, which had the regular Infogrames logo and no Atari logo outside the packaging).
 * The still version appears on mostly Game Boy Color and Game Boy Advance titles.
 * The version with the armadillo atop the banner appears on Blender Bros. (inverted), Dragon Ball Z: Collectable Card Game, Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku, Dungeons and Dragons: Eye of the Beholder, Nascar Heat 2002, and Nicktoons Racing.
 * The animated version appears on Lucky Luke: Wanted! and Mr. Nutz, although compressed due to GBA video limitations.
 * The still version (white on black) made a surprise appearance on the 2015 iOS versions of Spy Fox 3: Operation Ozone and Freddi Fish and the Case of the Creature of Coral Cove, alongside the 1996-2002 Humongous logo, due to an editing mistake. The normal version also appeared on the 2014 iOS version of Pajama Sam: No Need to Hide When it's Dark Outside, due to (yet) another editing mistake.
 * It doesn't appear on any Sega or Bandai titles they distributed in Europe, despite the print logo appearing on the back.