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.
First Star Software
First Star Software, Inc. was a Chappaqua, New York based video game development, publishing and licensing company, founded by Richard Spitalny (who remains the company's president), Billy Blake, Peter Jablon, and Fernando Herrera in 1982. It is best known for the series Boulder Dash, which began on the Atari 8-bit family, and Spy vs. Spy, which first appeared on the Commodore 64. Games were ported to or written for home computers, consoles, and later for Macintosh, Microsoft Windows, and portable devices. Millions of units have been sold in both the Boulder Dash and Spy vs. Spy series of games. As of January 1, 2018 the First Star Software name and website are owned by BBG Entertainment GmbH which also purchased all intellectual property rights pertaining to Astro Chase, BOiNG!, Boulder Dash, Bristles, Flip & Flop, Millennium Warriors, Omnicron Conspiracy, Panic Button, Rent Wars and Security Alert.
G5 Software
Art Games Studio
We are a development team and publishing house based in Warsaw, Poland. Creating and supporting games on PC and Nintendo Switch.
NDCube
NDCube Co., Ltd. is a Japanese game development studio that was founded on March 1, 2000 as a joint venture between Nintendo and Dentsu, a Japanese advertising company. Since 2010 the company has been a fully owned subsidiary of Nintendo. In later years the company has been most known for developing games in the Mario Party and Wii Party series and a large number of employees have a background at Hudson Soft Company, the previous developer of the Mario Party series. The company's offices are located in Tokyo and Sapporo. In 2024, the company was renamed to Nintendo Cube
Crescent Moon Games
Crescent Moon Games (ex. Galoobeth Games and Human Powered Games) is an iOS, Android and PC/Consoles indie game developer.
Reppo
For Kids
Kimberly Kubus
Kimberly Kubus (1986–2014), real name Kim Okkerstrøm, was a prolific Norwegian indie game developer, musician, and filmmaker known for creating over 200 experimental and surreal games between 2001 and 2013. Operating under multiple pseudonyms including Kimberly Kubus, Sparlatacus, and PG Games, he became an early outsider artist figure in video game development, creating avant-garde titles that deliberately challenged conventional game design. His most recognized work is the "Johnny" series, consisting of 36 games featuring the protagonist Johnny with his characteristically long nose navigating hostile, surreal worlds. Known for intentionally imperfect yet artistically significant creations, Kubus used video games as a medium to explore his mental health experiences, treating them as art rather than commercial products. Much of his work is now considered lost media, with only a handful of his games preserved through the Internet Archive. Kimberly Kubus died in December 2014, and the cause of death was suicide. He struggled with mental health issues, and his death was confirmed by friends and collaborators later that month. This tragic aspect adds a somber context to his artistic legacy.
Broccoli
Broccoli Co., Ltd. is a Japanese media company that publishes manga, anime, video games and trading card games. It operates a chain of retailers in Japan called Gamers which carries similar products and accessories. Broccoli is best known for their Di Gi Charat, Galaxy Angel and Aquarian Age franchises.
Chunsoft
Chunsoft was founded in 1984 by Koichi Nakamura after he won a competition hosted by Enix through programming and designing the game DoorDoor. Chunsoft is best known for developing the Dragon Quest (Dragon Warrior in North America) series of games, published by Enix. In 2012, Chunsoft merged with Spike Co., Ltd. and became Spike Chunsoft Co., Ltd.
DreamFactory
Dream Factory Co., Ltd. is a Japanese video game developer founded in 1995, based out of Tokyo. They are best known for developing fighting and beat 'em up games, such as the Tobal No. 1 fighting game series and the high-profile PlayStation 2 launch title The Bouncer, both developed under Square Co. The company's chairman, Seiichi Ishii, is an industry veteran who served as an early designer and director for two fighting game franchises: Virtua Fighter (published by Sega) and Tekken (published by Namco). In 2003 they formed a partnership with Microsoft to develop "Kakuto Chojin: Back Alley Brutal" under the name of Dream Publishing. After the game did not meet their sales expectations, the original name of DreamFactory returned as their mainstay brand. Despite a lack of relevant activity the past decade, it is still not officially deemed as defunct. In August 2015, Seiichi Ishii announced after delivering a mobile game for Bandai Namco (Xevious ガンプの謎はすべて解けた!?) that he is currently the only employee working for the company. He now enjoys the pace of making small projects rather than high budget blockbusters.
Funcom
Funcom was founded in 1993 and has since then developed and published over 25 game titles across several genres and gaming platforms. Most notable of these are the MMOs 'The Secret World', 'Age of Conan' and 'Anarchy Online', as well as the adventure game 'The Longest Journey'. There are about 130 talented individuals from several different nationalities working at Funcom, spread out across offices in Norway, Canada, and the US. After more than 20 years of operation one of the largest and most influential independent development studios in the business.
SEGA AM1
Shaba Games
Beenox
CAVE Interactive
CAVE is a developer of arcade shoot 'em up games and smartphone games. "CAVE" is an acronym for "Computer Art Visual Entertainment".
Delphine Software
Delphine Software International was a French video game developer. They were famous for publishing Another World and creating the cinematic platform game Flashback, which bore a similarity to Prince of Persia, both in gameplay and in its use of rotoscoped animation. They were also known for their Moto Racer series. The company closed down in July 2004 after bankruptcy and liquidation. Their official website has since shut down.
Square Enix Creative Business Unit I
Creative Business Unit I was an internal development division within Square Enix led by Yoshinori Kitase. It focuses on Final Fantasy single-player titles, spin-offs, SaGa and Kingdom Hearts. The studio was renamed to Creative Studio 1 in April of 2024 as part of a re-organization within Square Enix.