For much of the early 1990s, the Gamesampler, a subset of the Entertainment Pack small enough to fit on a single high-density disk, was shipped as a free eleventh disk added to a ten-pack of Verbatim blank 3.5" microfloppy diskettes. Games on the sampler included Jezzball, Rodent's Revenge, Tetris, and Skifree. A "Best of" disk of several of the games was also available at times as a mail-in premium from Kellogg's cereals.
Verbatim Corporation, a Japanese company that markets storage media and flash memory
Verbatim also resells relabeled products from Japanese, Taiwanese, Mainland Chinese, Malaysian and Indian factories (Pearl White DVD series in Europe, some CD-R not labeled Super Azo), including but not limited to products by Taiyo Yuden, Ritek Corporation, CMC Magnetics, Prodisc, Moser Baer, Daxon/BenQ.
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | Australian Broadcasting Corporation | Oracle Corporation | International Finance Corporation | Chevron Corporation | Digital Equipment Corporation | News Corporation | Lockheed Corporation | corporation | Hearst Corporation | Scholastic Corporation | Northrop Corporation | Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation | Gibson Guitar Corporation | CBS Corporation | Fender Musical Instruments Corporation | ITT Corporation | Sharp Corporation | RAND Corporation | NCR Corporation | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | Sperry Corporation | Singer Corporation | Case Corporation | Science Applications International Corporation | Polaroid Corporation | Multinational corporation | Burroughs Corporation | Bendix Corporation | Olympus Corporation |
Many companies including EMTEC, Maxell, Memorex, Letraset, Fujifilm, BASF, Verbatim, and Lexmark sold products manufactured by Nomaï under OEM and distribution agreements.
Rebranded Taiyo Yuden media can be found under Fujifilm, Fusion, Maxell (Maxell Music CD-R, Maxell CD-R Pro, and Maxell CD-R Music Pro (discontinued)), Miflop, Panasonic, Plextor, Sony (Sony Music CD-R (discontinued 2008)), TDK, and Verbatim Corporation brands.