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of America had outgrown its space in San Jose, and the decision was made to relocate the company to join its
other half in Torrance. The following year, SNK merged both halves of the company into a single entity: SNK of America. By now, former president Paul Jacobs had left the company. In his place were Marty Kitazawa, who would reign as acting president of SNK of America through 1996, and John Barone, former VP of sales, who was promoted to vice president of the coin-op division. Kitazawa stayed out of the limelight, focusing primarily on liaison duties between the US office and Japan. Barone served as the public spokesperson for the company and its NeoGeo line, at least up until mid-1993,
when he was let go for undisclosed reasons. Fret not for Barone, however, at least not yet. He would return to run SNK in the late 1990s and take on the responsibility of pushing the company's Hyper NeoGeo 64, Neo Print, and NeoGeo Pocket Color product line-ups--which all ultimately ended in failure. Barone would also
earn the ire of fans for failing to promote SNK's products in the wake of the Sony PlayStation and Sega Dreamcast consoles. Both of these stories are told later on in our timeline, and we still have plenty to cover first. Chad Okada: The Game Lord Speaks If you ever happened upon one of SNK's multipage advertisements during the early 1990s, and especially if you actually owned a NeoGeo AES console, chances are, you know of the Game Lord.
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Although traditionally, honorifics are not applied to oneself, some people adopt the childlike affectation of referring to themselves in the third person using -chan (childlike because it suggests that one has not learned to distinguish
between names used for oneself and names used by others). For example, a young girl named Kanako might call herself Kanako-chan rather than the first-person pronoun. Tan[edit] Tan (たん) is intended as an even cuter[6] or affectionate variant of -chan. It evokes a small child's
mispronunciation of that form of address, or baby talk – similar to how, for example, a speaker of English might use "widdle" instead of "little" when speaking to a baby. Moe anthropomorphisms are often labeled as -tan, e. g.