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.
Starfish-SD Inc
Fan-na
Acttil
Raster Productions
Cohort Studios
Cohort Studios was a games development and interactive entertainment studio. It was based in Dundee but closed its office there in May 2011. Formed in 2006, by Lol Scragg, Darran Thomas and Bruce McNeish, Cohort's first project involved being contracted by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe to assist on MotorStorm for PlayStation 3. This was followed with work on Go! Puzzle for PlayStation Network on both PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable. In addition, the company developed a small downloadable driving title which was used on the website of the Audi TT. Early in 2008, Cohort Studios released Buzz! Junior: Dino Den for the PlayStation 2 followed later in the year with Buzz! Junior: Ace Racers. Also in 2008, they won the contract for re-developing three of the PS2 Buzz! Junior titles to be distributed via the PlayStation Network for the PlayStation 3. The titles were to feature 5 of the best mini-games as well as including trophy support and the ability to use a DualShock wireless controller instead of Buzzers. In October 2010, the company released The Shoot on the PlayStation 3 platform, published by SCEE. The title was one of the first titles to use Sony's new PlayStation Move controller based around the concept of being a movie action hero on a movie set. On April 21, 2011, Cohort announced that the studio was closing due to "a declining console marketplace". Prior to closing Cohort managed to release the two PlayStation minis titles it had been working on namely, Cohort Chess[3] and Me Monstar: Hear me Roar!
Basicbean
Hellbent Games
Softnyx
seven_cents
Also known as Ashton Statesman. contact [email protected] for business inquiries or love letters.
Meiri
TRITHESIA
Silicon Knights
Silicon Knights was a game development company Headquartered in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, founded in 1992 by Denis Dyack. In 2007, Silicon Knights sued Epic Games, the developers of the Unreal Engine, about their losses and problems related to Unreal Engine 3. However, on August 9, 2007, Epic Games counter-sued Silicon Knights over, among other things, copyright infringement related to Unreal Engine. Epic Games won on May 30, 2012. This case led Silicon Knights to multiple lawsuits, resulting in the company filing for bankruptcy on May 16, 2014.