THQ

Background
THQ ("Toy Head-Quarters") was an American developer and publisher founded in 1989 by LJN co-founder Jack Friedman. In 1990, THQ acquired the video game division of Broderbund Software and released its first game Peter Pan and the Pirates (based on the Fox Kids TV series of the same name) in 1991. That same year, THQ was acquired by Trinity Acquisition Corporation. In 1994, THQ stopped making toys to focus on video games. THQ acquired several game developers in the 2000s including Relic Entertainment, Volition and many others. In 2008, THQ's troubles began when they closed five studios, spun off two studios (Heavy Iron Studios and Incinerator Studios), and sold Big Huge Games to 38 Studios (a company owned by Major League Baseball pitcher Curt Schilling). In 2010, THQ renamed Juice Games and Rainbow Studios to THQ Digital Warrington and THQ Digital Phoenix. In 2011, THQ closed four studios (THQ Studio Australia, Blue Tongue Entertainment, Kaos Studios and THQ Digital Warrington). In 2012, THQ defaulted on a $50 million loan from Wells Fargo. On December 19, 2012, THQ filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. In January 2013, THQ sold the Homefront franchise to Crytek, Relic Entertainment and the Warhammer 40,000 series to Sega, the WWE series and Evolve (a game from Turtle Rock Studios) to Take-Two Interactive, THQ Montreal and the publishing rights for South Park: The Stick of Truth to Ubisoft, and Volition and the publishing rights for the Metro franchise to Koch Media/Deep Silver. In April 2013, THQ's remaining franchises were auctioned off to Nordic Games, while Homeworld was sold to Gearbox Software and Drawn to Life was acquired by 505 Games. Nordic Games later acquired the THQ trademark in 2014, and changed their name to THQ Nordic in 2016 to associate themselves better with the THQ name.

1st Logo (January 1991-1993)
Nickname: "Toy Headquarters"

Logo: On a white background, we see the words "T•HQ Software", with a red dot between "T" and "H". There is a byline below them: "A Division of T•HQ, Inc."

Variants:
 * On Fox's Peter Pan and the Pirates, the logo reads "T•HQ, Inc.", and "Presents..." below.
 * On Wayne's World, the logo reads "T•HQ software", and "PRESENTS" below.
 * On The Ren & Stimpy Show: Veediots!, the logo reads "T•HQ, Inc.", and "TOY HEADQUARTERS" below. Under it, we see Ren and Stimpy banging their butts together.
 * On The Great Waldo Search, the background is gradient blue.
 * On Road Riot 4WD, the background is red and the copyright info is taken into brackets.
 * The Adventures of Rocky And Bullwinkle And Friends variant is almost the same as the Wayne's World variant, but it's higher-quality and "PRESENTS" is located far more below.

FX/SFX: The animation in the variants or still.

Music/Sounds: None or the opening theme of the game. On The Adventures of Rocky And Bullwinkle And Friends, a 8-bit rendition of the beginning of the theme can be heard.

Availability: Rare. It can be seen on The Lawnmower Man and the aforementioned games. It also appears on Game Boy.

2nd Logo (November 1994)
Nicknames: "Animals", "Ren and Stimpy", "The Ren & Stimpy Show: Time Warp Variant", "THQ Box", "The Nick Splat-THQ Box Combo"

Logo: On a black background, 2 pieces of wood can be seen on the top left and bottom right of the screen. Then, Ren pushes in the the Nickelodeon Splat logo while Stimpy pushes in a prototype of the next logo. The logo consists of the word "T•HQ" in a white font with a red dot inside a thick white box. Below "T•HQ", there is a red bar with "Inc." on it. When they step on the wood, the planks are sent flying and both of them stand with nervous-looking smiles.

FX/SFX: Ren and Stimpy pushing the logos in.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Seen only on The Ren & Stimpy Show: Time Warp for SNES.

3rd Logo (1996-March 1997)
Nickname: "Old-Styled Dot"

Logo: On a black background, the 2nd logo is seen taking up the whole screen, turned at an angle towards the right. There is no border surrounding the logo. Copyright information is shown below the logo.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The game's opening theme.

Availability: Seen on Brunswick World Tournament Champions for SNES. It also appears on The Hunchback of Notre Dame: Topsy Turvy Games and Hercules for Game Boy.

4th Logo (July 16, 1997-June 1, 2000)
Nickname: "THQ Box II"

Logo: A glowing red bar with a rippling texture appears and zooms out, sticking to the screen. Then the letters appear one by one: the "T" zooms out from the left, then the "H" zooms in from the middle, then the "Q" zooms out from the right. A lens flare then writes in "Inc." on the bar, causing the texture to disappear. A lens flare then appears behind the logo before 2 more lens flares draw in the square border.

Variants: There are several variants of this logo:


 * On weak platforms (which don't have enough capacity to play video), the logo is still.
 * On Sinistar, the animation is different. "THQ" and the rest of the logo zooms out in pieces and stick together over a blue metallic background with several scratches. Here, the text is taken into a black box and the red line is blank. The background then disappears and "PRESENTS" spreads out below the logo.
 * On X: Beyond the Frontier, the logo is rendered with the in-game engine, forming through several glass planes.
 * On Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games, the box is omitted.
 * On SNES and Genesis versions of Madden NFL '98 and NBA Live '98 as well as some titles for Game Boy, there is no box, but the copyright information is also shown below.
 * On Penny Racers, the background is white and we see the copyright information from Nintendo and Takara.
 * On Destruction Derby for Nintendo 64, the red bar is empty. This is also seen on Game Boy Color.

FX/SFX: The logo forming.

Music/Sounds: A couple of whooshing and zapping sounds.

Music/Sounds Variants:


 * On X, there is a trumpet fanfare ending with a single hit.
 * On Sinistar, there is a mysterious windchime pass.
 * The still variant is silent or has the opening theme of the game.

Availability: Common on older games, preferably the still version (especially in the early years). The animated version can be seen on games for PC and PlayStation such as Rugrats: The Search for Reptar and WCW/NWO Thunder. The animated version is also seen on some Game Boy Color games, including A Bug's Life and FIFA 2000.

5th Logo (2000-2011)
Nicknames: "T-H-Q!", "The Parallelogram"

Logo: On a black background, a steel parallelogram is formed with parts of it being sliced off, and it flashes. A larger outline of the parallelogram appears outside it, and 3 silver letters with cuts in them ("T" and "Q" from right, "H" from left) slide onto the parallelogram. A red bar appears from left and bumps into the shield, making it sway and completing the logo. The company website address fades in below, and the shield border shines.

Variants:
 * A still print version exists.
 * A shield-less version was seen on Rugrats in Paris for N64 and PS - probably the first appearance of this logo. The same version, only smaller, was used on Championship Motocross for PS.
 * On the GBA version of The Incredibles, the logo animates on a white background, the border and web address already formed, and the border doesn't sway. It then all flies away for the Helixe logo. A version without the Helixe logo was seen on Ratatouille for GBA and NDS.
 * On Rugrats: Royal Ransom, SpongeBob SquarePants: Employee of the Month, Splashdown: Rides Gone Wild, Scooby-Doo! Night of 100 Frights, and the PS2, GCN, Xbox, and PC versions of The Incredibles, the website address is eliminated.

FX/SFX: The whole animation.

Music/Sounds: Synthesized whooshes, followed by a male announcer saying "T-H-Q!" where the correct letters appear, and a metallic thud when the red bar bumps into the shield. An electronic buzzing sound is heard as the shield shines.

Music/Sounds Variant: On non-US releases of Rugrats in Paris (the PC game), the normal sound effects are replaced with cartoon sounds, which consists of a whirl, a whizzing sound, a bonk sound, and another whirl, all as the letters appear. Additionally, the THQ name is uttered by a group of kids instead, and the famous Hanna-Barbera "boing" sound is heard when the red bar appears (likely a nod to the 1998 Klasky-Csupo “Splaat" logo), where the logo then falls to silence.

Availability: Common on games from the time, such as Finding Nemo and aforementioned titles. This can still be seen on Game Boy Color, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo DS, and early Nintendo 3DS games, including SpongeBob's Truth or Square, Cars, and Finding Nemo. The first games to use this were SpongeBob SquarePants: Operation Krabby Patty, Rugrats All Growed Up: Older and Bolder, and Power Rangers Lightspeed Rescue. It also appears on Rugrats Go Wild (the PC game) and Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron - Forever Free.

6th Logo (2003-2011)
Nicknames: "The Light-Striking Parallelogram", "The Parallelogram II"

Logo: A silver-blue "H" letter flips around onto a black background, filled with blue lights and lasers. The rest of the logo then slides in, with the border zooming out. Electricity is also seen charging on the logo. After a shine and a few seconds, the border flips towards the screen and the letters zoom in one by one, ending the logo.

FX/SFX: Pretty much everything.

Music/Sounds: Many whooshes and some electric sounds.

Availability: Common, used occasionally alongside the other "shield" logos; it is known to appear in Juiced, the Tak and the Power of Juju trilogy, Cars, The Incredibles: Rise of the Underminer, and many PSP releases. It can be seen on the PC games of Bratz 4 Real, Bratz: Rock Angelz and Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed.

7th Logo (2003-February 22, 2011)
Nicknames: "The Streaks", "The Parallelogram III"

Logo: On a black background, the logo is seen darkened sans the border, rotating around while surrounded by several streaks of white and red light. The streaks then strike the border, illuminating the logo one part at a time before shining.

Variants: Go to this page.

FX/SFX: The rotating of the logo, the comets.

Music/Sounds: The comet whooshing and blasts.

Availability: Common in every game up to 2011, such as Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War, Barnyard, and Ratatouille. The last game to use this logo is De Blob 2 (February 2011), which uses this logo in-game but the next logo on its box art.

8th Logo (February 2011-November 30, 2012)
Nickname: "Abstract Q", "The Red Q"

Logo: On a white background, a grey line slides in, which turns into a large red curve drawing upwards. The camera zooms out to reveal it is a abstract red "Q". A grey line then emerges from it, causing the"Q" to go left and the line to sprout into a large grey square. It splits to form "TH", with the latter missing the top left part of it. They form "THQ" while a red registered trademark symbol appears to the bottom right of it.

Variant: The internal studios have their subnames in gray under the main logo.

FX/SFX: The animation.

Music/Sounds: A deep whoosh sound similar to wind blowing, ending with two silent bumps.

Availability: Appeared on all THQ games from February 2011 to their final games in late 2012; Homefront and WWE All Stars were among the first ones. Technically, this logo made its first retail appearance on the box art of De Blob 2, despite the previous logo being used in-game.