Katsuhiro Hayashi
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{{#ifeq: || {{#if:|[[Category: No mainpic for {{#switch:{{#expr: ({{ #time: U }} - {{ #time: U |}})/2592000round 0}} |0=0 months |1=1 month |2=2 months |3=3 months |4=3 months |5=3 months |6=6 months |7=6 months |8=6 months |9=9 months |10=9 months |11=9 months |12=1 year |13=1 year |14=1 year |15=1 year |16=1 year |17=1 year |18=1 year |19=1 year |20=1 year |21=1 year |22=1 year |23=1 year |24=2 years |25=2 years |26=2 years |27=2 years |28=2 years |29=2 years |30=2 years |31=2 years |32=2 years |33=2 years |34=2 years |35=2 years |36=3 years |37=3 years |38=3 years |39=3 years |40=3 years |41=3 years |42=3 years |43=3 years |44=3 years |45=3 years |46=3 years |47=3 years |too damn long! }}]]|}} }} Katsuhiro Hayashi (林 克洋 Hayashi Katsuhiro, b. October 28, 1965), also known as Funky K.H., is a Japanese video game composer. He is best known for his work on various Sega titles such as Black Belt, Gain Ground, Super-Hang On, Galaxy Force, and Thunder Blade, the latter three of which were composed in collaboration with fellow [[wikipedia:{{#if:|:}}S.S.T. Band|{{#if:||S.S.T. Band}}]] member Koichi Namiki, whom he had previously known and invited to join Sega. Hayashi left Sega in 1990 to become a freelance composer, working on other games such as Virtual Open Tennis and Nushi Tsuri 64.