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.

Red Company Logo

Red Company

1 jeu

Red Company (レッドカンパニー, Reddo Kanpanī) was founded in 1976 (though it did not begin doing business until 1985), it was reorganized and succeeded by a new company on December 4, 2000, under its current moniker of Red Entertainment. While Red Company as a public corporation dates back to the mid-1980s, the first title released under the Red Entertainment brand was Gungrave on July 17, 2002. The name "RED" comes from "Royal Emperor Dragon".

Logidisque

1 jeu

PC gaming company based in Quebec, active in the 80s and 90s.

Pockawl Logo

Pockawl

1 jeu

We make remarkable games.

SIMS Logo

SIMS

1 jeu

SIMS was founded as a collaboration between Sega and Sanritsu, who had previously acted as a subcontractor for Sega mainly in the arcade market. The last game to be developed under the Sanritsu label was Fantasy Zone Gear for Sega's Game Gear. Upon the foundation of SIMS, 50 of Sanritsu's staff were transferred to the new company, which programmed and ported games for most of Sega's platforms in the nineties. At the same time, Sega took over the entire ownership of the company. However, on June 25, 2004 the president of SIMS, Noboru Machida, took back all the stocks and the company regained its independence.

IronMonkey Studios Logo

IronMonkey Studios

1 jeu

Based in Melbourne, IronMonkey Studios is comprised of some of Australia's most experienced creative development staff. The team draws upon a wealth of knowledge gained producing dozens of games, on formats ranging from the 8-bit era to the PS2 and beyond. In 2010, IronMonkey Studios was acquired by publisher Electronic Arts to join its game development studio family. In July of 2012, the company was merged with fellow Australia game company Firemint to form the joint office FireMonkeys.

Nex Entertainment Logo

Nex Entertainment

1 jeu

Nex Entertainment, formerly known as GAU Entertainment and Nextech, was a Japanese video game developer. It developed each games for other companies on a contract basis. Their clients include Sega, Capcom, Namco, Takara, Taito, Atlus and Square Enix.

Bedlam Games Logo

Bedlam Games

1 jeu
30.0/100

Bedlam Games was a Canadian video game developer originally formed in late 2005 as a subsidiary of Groove Games. The two companies split in 2007, with Bedlam becoming independent afterwards. In August 2011, the company was closed.

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