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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Fortyfive
Fortyfive Co., Ltd. (株式会社フォーティファイブ) was founded on May 5, 1990, as AIM (株式会社エイム) and was headed by Hideaki Tsujikawa (辻川英章). The company was renamed in June 1998. Company activities ceased some time after 2003.
The Station Interactive
The Station, officially Station Interactive AB, was founded in 2013 when Mattias Nygre, Tarsier Studio's CEO and Executive Producer at the time, acquired the office in Karlshamn, Sweden and left the company. Many of the employees that had not moved to Tarsier's Malmö office in 2010 stayed at the new studio and continued the working with Sony on the LittleBigPlanet franchise. The company is mainly known for its art outsourcing work and was acquired by Thunderful Games in late 2020.
AQ Interactive
AQ Interactive was a Japanese video game developer and publisher. AQ stands for Artistic Quality. AQ Interactive and its subsidiaries produced games both under the AQ Interactive name, as well as developing for other publishers such as Microsoft Game Studios and Nintendo.
Zik
HuneX
Publisher and developer company established in October 1992 in Tokyo, Japan. In many of it's releases different brand names and logos are used instead of HuneX one.
Zynga
Zynga is an American video game developer running social video game services headquartered in San Francisco, California, United States.
Lusterise
ZOOM
Zoom Inc. (株式会社ズーム kabushiki gaisha zuumu) is a Japanese video game company based in Sapporo, Japan. Focusing on game software and mobile applications, as well as content planning, development, and sales.
HitPoint Studios Inc.
DotEmu
Dotemu was founded by Xavier Liard and Romain Tisserand in 2007. The company's offices are located in Paris, close to the Folies Bergère. In April 2010, Dotemu launched a new digital distribution service that would sell games without digital rights management, akin to Good Old Games. In March 2017, Dotemu announced that their online store would be closed down on 1 June that year.[4] The company cited tough market competition and their focus shifting towards game development rather than game distribution. In September 2015, Liard and Tisserand sold their company to an unnamed private investor.[7] Later that month, they founded a new video game publisher, Playdigious (who would later publish Dotemu’s games on mobile platforms). Subsequently, in October 2014, Cyrille Imbert was appointed as Dotemu's chief executive officer. In March 2018, Dotemu announced the creation of The Arcade Crew, a publishing label that would support small development teams. In August 2021, the company was acquired by Focus Home Interactive (now Focus Entertainment) for approximately €38.5 million (US$46 million).
G-Craft
G-Craft (ジークラフト Jīkurafuto) was a Japanese video game developer that was founded in 1994. They focused their first development on a Super Nintendo Tactical RPG Front Mission which released on February 24, 1995. They began developing their second game Arc The Lad in order to help Sony bring a wider RPG audience to the platform it would be another Tactical RPG game. Arc The Lad released on June 30, 1995 this game also proved to be a success. After the success of Arc The Lad they began working on a sequel. Arc The Lad II released on November 1, 1996. They also developed and released a spin-off title Arc Arena: Monster Tournament on July 31, 1997. In 1997 G-Craft began development on Front Mission 2 which released on September 25, 1997. This would be the final game would develop as a company. With the success of the Front Mission games, Square offered to merge with G-Craft in 1997 and they accepted. G-craft became a member of the Square Product Development Division 6.
Millennium Interactive
From the Wiki: "The company was founded by Michael Hayward, Tony Beckwith, Ian Saunter in 1988. In 1993, Steve Grand began developing a project based on artificial life. In November 1994, Cyberlife was established to further the development of Steve Grand's concept for artificial life game. By November 1996, there were 10 people in this department. On 4 July 1997, Millennium Interactive, along with several of their upcoming projects, was sold to Sony Interactive Entertainment for an undisclosed amount and was subsequetnly renamed to SCE Cambridge Studio, which was later reorganized as Guerrilla Cambridge as a subsidiary to the Dutch first-party video game developer Guerrilla Games, which is also owned by Sony."
Toho