Tous les studios de développement

Découvrez la liste des studios de développement de jeux vidéo répertoriés sur notre base de données, classés par nombre de titres produits.

Velan Studios Logo

Velan Studios

3 jeux
82.5/100

Velan Studios is a video game developer headquartered in Troy, New York. Founded in November 2016 by Guha Bala and Karthik Bala.

Matrix Software Logo

Matrix Software

3 jeux
58.9/100

Matrix Corporation (株式会社マトリックス, Kabushiki gaisha Matorikkusu), commonly referred to as Matrix Software, is a Japanese video game development company located in Tokyo. Founded in July 1994 by former members of Climax Entertainment and Telenet Japan, the company has since created games for a number of systems beginning with their action-adventure game title Alundra in April 1997. Matrix has teamed with other developers such as Square Enix and Chunsoft to produce games for existing franchises such as Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, as well as other anime and manga properties. In addition to game console development, Matrix Software has also made games for various Japanese mobile phone brands since 2001.

Bullfrog Productions Logo

Bullfrog Productions

3 jeux
77.6/100

Bullfrog Productions was a British developer. It was founded in 1987 by Les Edgar and Peter Molyneux. They were best known for their strategy god games such as Populous. In January 1995, to strengthen its global positioning, Bullfrog Productions merged with long time publishing partner Electronic Arts. In August 1997, Bullfrog co-founder, Peter Molyneux, left to establish a new development team, Lionhead Productions (who, incidentally, has also signed a distribution deal with Electronic Arts). In September 1999, Les Edgar changed his role to consultant for Bullfrog Productions Limited, enabling him to pay more equitable attention to his other business interests. Edgar handed the reins to Bruce McMillan from Electronic Arts' Canadian studio. Following its purchase by EA, Bullfrog continued to work in its original offices in Guildford as an EA studio, and continued to display its own Bullfrog logo on the boxes of its games. In 2000, Electronic Arts merged its EA-UK offices, which had been in Langley near Slough, with the Bullfrog offices, into a new facility in Chertsey. Around August of that year the company decided to drop all further production of Bullfrog-branded products, and the former Bullfrog employees were put onto new projects such as the Harry Potter series. The last Bullfrog-branded game was Sim Theme Park (also known as Theme Park World and Theme Park 2), released in 1999. A few compilations of older games that Bullfrog worked on have been published since, but to all intents and purposes the brand has been dead since the move to Chertsey in 2000. Many Bullfrog developers left to found their own studios and these became Intrepid Computer Entertainment Ltd., Big Blue Box Studios Ltd. and Lionhead Studios. The latter eventually absorbed the first two and became the only studio to carry on the Bullfrog legacy.

Rockstar North Logo

Rockstar North

3 jeux
86.7/100

Rockstar North was founded in 1988 under the name DMA Design, they are a British video game developer based in Scotland. They are best known for creating the Grand Theft auto franchise and Lemmings franchise. Since 1999 they have been part of Rockstar Games which is owned by Take-Two Interactive. It was not before 2002 that they went trough a name shift and ended up on being called Rockstar North.

Jaleco Logo

Jaleco

3 jeux
66.6/100

Jaleco Ltd. (株式会社ジャレコ, Kabushiki Kaisha Jareko) was a corporate brand name that was used by two previously connected video game developers and publishers based in Japan. The original Jaleco company was founded in 1974 as Japan Leisure Company, founded by Yoshiaki Kanazawa, before being renamed to simply Jaleco in the early 1980s. This company was later acquired in 2000 by PCCW, who rebranded it as their Japanese game division, PCCW Japan, before reverting it to Jaleco in 2002. In 2006, Jaleco became independent from PCCW and renamed to Jaleco Holding, having their video game operations spun off into a new company, also called Jaleco. This new spin-off company was sold to mobile developer Game Yarou in 2009, with Jaleco Holding renaming itself to Encom Holdings shortly after.

Compile Logo

Compile

3 jeux
67.9/100

Compile Corporation (株式会社コンパイル, Kabushikigaisha Konpairu) was a Japanese video game developer, most notable for having developed the Puyo Puyo series, a franchise derived from the Madō Monogatari series. On 6 November 2003, the company shut down amid bankruptcy. As a result, key staff moved to Compile Heart, the company's spiritual successor, whereas shoot-'em-up staff moved to MileStone Inc.[1] The Compile trademark is being used as a brand label by Compile Heart to promote merchandise and games based on Compile properties.[2] As of 2010, Compile Heart entered into a licensing deal with D4 Enterprise to create new video games based on franchises from Compile properties.[3][4] This agreement does not affect the rights to the Puyo Puyo series as Sega retains ownership of the property.[5] In April 2016, Niitani started a new successor company to Compile, Compile Maru. The company launched the game Nyoki Nyoki: Tabidachi Hen for Nintendo 3DS on the Nintendo eShop with a follow-up scheduled for Nintendo Switch.

Hitmaker Logo

Hitmaker

3 jeux
63.1/100

Hitmaker Co., Ltd. was a development subsidiary of Sega created with members from an in-house department titled Amusement Machine 3 Research & Development(AM3 R&D) and it later absorbed another subsidiary, Sega Rossa, before being shutdown and reorganized back into an internal Sega R&D structure after Sega's merger with Sammy.

LittleWing Co. Ltd. Logo

LittleWing Co. Ltd.

3 jeux

LittleWing Co. Ltc. is a Japanese video game developer founded in 1990 and located in Toyama, Japan. LittleWing focuses on digital pinball games.

Nitrome Logo

Nitrome

3 jeux

Nitrome is a browser and mobile game development studio.

The Creative Assembly Logo

The Creative Assembly

3 jeux

The Creative Assembly is a British video game developer founded by Tim Ansell. In its early years, the company worked on porting games to MS-DOS from Amiga and ZX Spectrum platforms, later working with Electronic Arts to produce a variety of games under the EA Sports brand. In 1999, the company had sufficient resources to attempt a new and original project, proceeding to develop the strategy computer game Shogun: Total War which was a critical and commercial hit, and is regarded as a benchmark strategy game. Under Sega, further Total War titles were developed, and The Creative Assembly entered the console market with action-adventure games such as Spartan: Total Warrior, Viking: Battle for Asgard and Alien: Isolation.

Torus Games Logo

Torus Games

3 jeux
49.0/100

Torus Games is the most prolific independent game developer in the world. In almost 25 years, we have launched more than 120 titles across 200 SKUs. Torus has released titles on every popular platform since the original Game Boy. These games include sports, racing, first-person shooters, children’s entertainment, platformers, and more recent research and educational titles. Torus is a quality game developer for all popular gaming platforms. We create both licensed and original titles. Our games are recognizable and engaging, a result of our 24 years of development history.

Koei Tecmo Games Logo

Koei Tecmo Games

3 jeux
82.9/100

In April 1, 2010, Tecmo was declared disbanded in Japan. Its sister company Koei survived but was renamed Koei Tecmo Games and is now the sole publishing arm of the group. Koei Tecmo Games continues to strategically use the "Tecmo" and "Koei" brand names on new video games for marketing purposes. In addition, the former development divisions of Tecmo and Koei were briefly spun-off as separate companies in March 2010, but folded into Tecmo Koei Games in April 2011.

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