Tous les éditeurs de jeux
Parcourez la liste des maisons d'édition et distributeurs de jeux vidéo répertoriés sur notre base de données, classés par volume de titres édités.
JVC Musical Industries
JVC Musical Industries, Inc. was founded in the United States in September 30th of 1982 as a subdivision of JVC. This department would happen to distribute video games in America from time to time. In May 1st, 1997 it was renamed into JVC Music, Inc.
CD Projekt
CD Projekt is a Polish video game developer, publisher and distributor based in Warsaw, founded in May 1994 by Marcin Iwiński and Michał Kiciński. Subsidiaries of CD Projekt are CD Projekt RED, GOG & Spokko.
Nippon Ichi Software
Nippon Ichi Software is a Japanese video game developer and publisher. Nippon Ichi, meaning "Japan's Best" or "Japan #1," is often abbreviated as "N1". More recently, particularly through their North American branch, NIS America, they have also published anime titles. In 2012 Nippon Ichi Software entered the Guinness World Records Book awarded for being the company that released the most strategy RPGs.
SPS
Frontier Foundry
Tapps Games
Rejet
Sega Enterprises, Inc.
Sega Enterprises, Inc. was the parent company of Sega Enterprises, Ltd. and Gremlin Industries. It was established by Gulf+Western and the first game it produced was Bullet Mark. SEI also traded as "Sega of America", sold electro-mechanical arcade games, sold the Sega-Vision (as part of a short-lived home theater division), and was responsible for the licensing and publishing of home console and computer versions of Sega arcade titles. The company purchased Gremlin Industries in 1978. This company, eventually becoming "Sega Electronics" was sold to Bally Midway in 1983. In April 1984 Sega's Japanese arm was purchased by a group of investors including Hayao Nakayama, David Rosen and Isao Okawa, becoming a subsidiary of CSK. The remaining American Sega assets owned by Gulf+Western would then be absorbed; SEI became Simon & Schuster Entertainment Software, Inc. on March 18, 1985 before becoming a shell company, Ages Entertainment Software, Inc. on August 30 of the same year.
Technos Japan
Technōs Japan Corp. was a Japanese video game developer, best known for the Double Dragon and Kunio-kun (which includes Renegade, Super Dodge Ball and River City Ransom) franchises. As of June 2015, Arc System Works owns the intellectual properties of Technōs Japan. Initially operating from a single-room apartment, Technōs was founded in 1981 by three staff members of Data East. Their first game was Minky Monkey, released in 1982. A few months after their foundation, a lawsuit was brought up against the company by Data East under allegations that Technos had stolen data from Data East's arcade game Pro Tennis with the intent of producing and selling a bootleg of it.[3] The two companies settled in August 1983 and Technos would go on to create two arcade games published by Data East, Tag Team Wrestling and Karate Champ. Technōs Japan's earlier games were published by other companies, as Technōs at the time did not have the economical resource to distribute their own games. Nekketsu Kōha Kunio-kun ("Hot Blooded Tough Guy Kunio"), a side-scrolling beat-em-up released in 1986 about a high school student who fought thugs and delinquents from other schools, was the company's first big hit in Japan. Kunio-kun was released in the west as Renegade with the game's graphics changed to make the game marketable in the overseas market. Technōs would then produce a Nintendo Entertainment System version of the game, which would be Technōs' first game for the home console market. Technōs Japan's subsequent arcade beat-em-up, Double Dragon, was a big success worldwide when it was released in 1987, leading to the production of an NES version of the game, as well as licensed versions by other companies for various platforms. The success of Kunio-kun led to the production of numerous spin-offs and sequels starring the same character produced for the 8-bit Family Computer platform in Japan and later for the Game Boy and Super Famicom, resulting in more than twenty games starring Kunio by the mid-1990s, many of which were rule-bending sports games. A few Kunio-kun games were localized for the North American market; namely Super Dodge Ball, River City Ransom (considered by critics to be a cult classic[citation needed]) and Nintendo World Cup, but none maintain any connection with each other. Technōs would attempt to remedy this by attempting to localize several Kunio-kun under the Crash 'n the Boys label, but only Crash 'n the Boys: Street Challenge was released (the game's ending features a teaser for Ice Challenge, which was unreleased). Technōs also released two arcade sequels to Double Dragon: Double Dragon II: The Revenge in 1988 and Double Dragon 3: The Rosetta Stone in 1990 (the latter was developed by an external development team at East Technology), and produced the respective NES versions of those games, as well as Super Double Dragon in 1992, an original installment for the Super NES. An American-produced Double Dragon animated series and a live-action film were also made as well. Outside the Double Dragon and Kunio-kun games, Technōs produced a few original games for the arcade and home markets such as U.S. Championship V'Ball, The Combatribes and Shadow Force, as well as two WWF arcade games (WWF Superstars and WWF Wrestlefest), but most of these games did not achieve the same kind of success that Kunio-kun and Double Dragon achieved. The company's last games were produced for the Neo Geo hardware, which include a Double Dragon fighting game based on the movie, their second and last fighting game Voltage Fighter Gowcaizer, and a Neo-Geo sequel to Super Dodge Ball. By 1996, Technōs Japan declared bankruptcy and ceased operations. Some of the developers who worked on the Neo Geo titles (including Kengo Asai) briefly worked at Face, a former affiliate of SNK. Following the closure, a licensing company named Million Co., Ltd was formed to purchase the former intellectual properties of Technōs Japan. Million continued to produce new games such as Super Dodge Ball Advance, Double Dragon Advance and River City Ransom EX for the Game Boy Advance, Super Dodgeball Brawlers for the Nintendo DS, as well as reissuing older titles via the Virtual Console and other services. On June 11, 2015, Arc System Works announced they had acquired all intellectual properties of Technōs Japan from Million Co., Ltd.
Empire Interactive
Sanuk Games
PLAION
PLAION is a global independent developer and producer of games and entertainment products and is part of the Embracer Group. On August 2022, Koch Media GmbH announced that effective that day all Koch Media companies worldwide will be renamed PLAION, accompanied by a complete rebranding.
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.
Game Troopers
Game Troopers is a publisher and developer dedicated to the Microsoft Store, Steam and Virtual Reality platforms. Our team offers a deep knowledge of the platforms and the whole ecosystem and will help your games to make the most of themselves. We have a strong development studio that supports our games, Starloop Studios, and the synergy created between both brands raise our games to an efficient and successful launch. The company was originally focused on publishing games on the Windows Store but the appearance of the new Virtual Reality market in 2016 made us create our first VR game called Overkill VR. Which was awarded with the Medal Bronze in Steam by Gross Revenue in Virtual Reality games category.
Pretty Soon
Kedexa
Ravenscourt
With a comprehensive portfolio as diverse as games themselves, Ravenscourt players delight in being swept away within the narrative driven adventures, thrive at the challenge of building new worlds, immerse themselves in simulations and even enjoy a good old sing-along with Karaoke! From Simulations, physic-based Puzzle Games to Indie gems, they all have one thing in common; their ability to give great gaming entertainment and thrills, whilst remaining accessible to all types of gamers. With a truly varied choice of incredible titles to choose from, matched with fair prices, Ravenscourt offers great games for all gamers.
Humongous Entertainment
TopWare Interactive
HandyGames
HandyGames is part of THQ Nordic Family and Embracer Group. We operate as an international indie games publisher and developer for small and medium-sized projects for a global community of gamers.