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.

Minakuchi Engineering Logo

Minakuchi Engineering

1 jeu
66.5/100

Minakuchi Engineering Co., Ltd. (水口エンジニアリング株式会社) was a Japanese video game developer based in Kōka, Shiga. Founded in May 1984, it had worked on approximately 40 titles for arcade, computer and home consoles, a large number of which went uncredited. It is best known for developing Mega Man games for Capcom, namely all of the Game Boy Mega Man games (except II) and Mega Man X3. Its exact fate is unknown, but its website was taken down in 2002.

Sega Europe Logo

Sega Europe

1 jeu
69.4/100

Ever since its establishment in August 1991, Sega Europe Ltd. is the European arm of Sega. The sister division is Sega of America. As the name suggests, Sega Europe are responsible for all of Sega's European operations, though localisation work is often done by smaller divisions of Sega operating in the European region, depending on the title. Sega Europe sells games in the EMEA region (Europe, Middle East, Africa) and in CIS countries.

Alt Shift Logo

Alt Shift

1 jeu
57.0/100

An independent game studio located in the city of Montpellier, in the sunny South of France. Founded by university classmates gathered by the desire to innovate and now driven by a senior team of passionate designers, Alt Shift aims to offer original and clever gaming experiences on PC/Mac, consoles and mobile platforms.

Quarter Up Logo

Quarter Up

1 jeu

Quarter Up is a Skybound games studio that's developing the Tag Fighter Invincible VS

Kouyousha Logo

Kouyousha

1 jeu

Kouyousha Ltd. (有限会社光遊社) Started April 17, 1996 by Hiroshi Nakamura (仲村浩), formerly of Data East.

Bandai Namco Studios Singapore

1 jeu

Bandai Namco Studios Singapore Pte. Ltd. was established as one of the core overseas development studios of Bandai Namco. It primarily operated as a supporting developer for games developed by the core Bandai Namco Studios.

Point of View Logo

Point of View

1 jeu
64.1/100

Point of View, Inc. was a privately held developer of video games headquartered in Irvine, California. It is known for working with Midway Games on many titles including NFL Blitz, Ready 2 Rumble Boxing, and MLB Slugfest 2004. The company was dissolved in 2010. Point of View was founded in February 1996 by three game industry veterans. The leaders of the company are founders Chris Warner (President) Mark Nausha (Vice President Business Development) and Mike Terlecki (Vice President of Technology). Many of the company's employees previously worked at studios such as Interplay and Troika Games. The studio employed 30 developers in 2009, and worked on Damnation and TNA Impact!: Cross The Line. In 2010, after a tumultuous relationship with partner Blue Omega Entertainment, and UK based publisher Codemasters, the company went out of business citing "financial difficulties" and lack of work.

MachineGames Logo

MachineGames

1 jeu
80.9/100

MachineGames was established in 2009 by former founding members of Starbreeze Studios and acquired by ZeniMax Media in 2010. Located in Uppsala, Sweden, MachineGames is a studio comprised of a seasoned group of developers recognized for their work creating story-driven games.

Hulabee Entertainment Inc. Logo

Hulabee Entertainment Inc.

1 jeu

Hulabee Entertainment was a game company founded in July 2001 by Shelley Day and Ron Gilbert, both previously the founders of Humongous Entertainment. The company struck a deal with Disney Interactive, who published their games through the Plaid Banana Entertainment imprint. The company stopped releasing new titles in 2004 and closed the next year, due to co-founder Shelley Day being convicted for fraud. In March 2002, Day requested loans, claiming she was selling part of Hulabee to Disney Interactive and showing a fake "letter of intent" for the sale. When she stopped paying, Day stated the sale was delayed due to Disney Interactive being sold to Vivendi Universal Games, again providing false documents to "prove" it. In 2003, a lawyer representing the bank contacted Disney Interactive in regards to their alleged sale to Vivendi Universal, and they both found out that Day had actually used the loans to buy a $3 million dream house in Mercer Island, Washington. This ultimately led to Day being imprisoned for 30 months on charges for bank fraud, and thus the folding of Hulabee in the process.

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