A list of (possible) publishers for your games!

Posted By: PHeMoX

A list of (possible) publishers for your games! - 09/27/05 23:40

On request I'm posting this list here, and I want to ask a moderator to sticky this, I liked fastlane's idea of doing so...
Well here's the list:


1
10tacle
German based publisher founded in the Summer of 2003, to market German language games.
2
2K Games
A publishing Label of Take-Two Interactive Europe, who whave worked on titles such as Vietcong 2 and the Xbox version of Sid Meier's Pirates!
3
3DO Europe
Once creators of games consoles in their own right; 3DO is now suffering from its fair share of financial woes, but is still busy publishing games.
4
4am Entertainment
A smaller publisher, but with some exciting titles such as Restricted Area and others.
a
Acclaim
With both highly successful, long running franchises such as the Turok series, and new ones such as Aggressive Inline and Burnout, Acclaim is one of the major multi-platform publishers. Sadly no more as of late 2004.
Activision
Activision publish titles on all formats, and are renowned for their movie-to-game licensing. They also handle LucasArts and have released some fantastic Star Wars titles over the years, inluding the spectaular Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader, for the GameCube.
Argonaut Games
Multi format publisher usually associated with original and wacky games.
Artematica
Publishers of their own titles such as Martin Mystere, Druuna and Ducati World Championship.
Arxel Tribe
Developer and publisher of games, founded in Slovenia and France in 1993.
Ascaron
British-based publishers who have worked on titles such as UFO: Aftershock and Creature Conflict: The Clan Wars.
Atari
Formerly known as Infogrames, the French-based publisher decided to switch names because of the long-running history of the Atari brand.
b
BAM! Entertainment
UK-based publishing company that has an impressive range of TV-to-game licences including "Dexter's Laboratory" and "Wallace and Gromit".
BBC Multimedia
Once in a while, a BBC TV program is so successful that they decide to make a game for it, and BBC Multimedia are the guys to publish them. Previous titles include "Bob The Builder" and "Robot Wars".
Bigben Interactive
Probably most notable for their involvement with the Dreamcast, Bigben also publish a range of games from smaller developers.
Black Bean Games
Games label for one of Italy's biggest independent distributors of software.
Brightstar Entertainment
Publishers of PC titles, which include Beach Volleyball, Halcyon Sun and Tombstone 1882.
Buena Vista Games
Publishers of various TV/film-to-game titles including "Spy Kids", "Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas" and "Disney's Magical Quest 2".
Buka Entertainment
Russian PC developer.
c
CDV Software Entertainment
German-based publishers CDV have published many great PC titles such as Cossacks: European Wars and Sudden Strike.
Cenega UK
Part of Cenega Publishing, a world wide games developer of cutting edge LAN games.
Codemasters
A successful UK-based publisher and developer that is responsible for the TOCA Touring Cars and Colin McRae rally franchises.
Crucial Entertainment
Publishers of the critically acclaimed online space-adventure title Eve Online: The Second Genesis.
Cryo UK
Publishers of PlayStation 2 and PC titles including "Megarace 3" and "The Shadow of Zorro".
d
Deep Silver
Game publishing division of Multi-Media publicity firm Koch Media, formed in 2003.
Digital Jesters
Publishers of unique types of games, such as Savage and the Chaos League, formed last year with a combined experience of 30 years.
DreamCatcher Interactive
These guys publish various multi-platform games such as "Arx Fatalis" and "X-treme Beach Soccer".
e
Eidos Interactive
Eidos' claim to fame was publishing Core Design's Lara Croft series, and since then, they have added more successful titles such as Commandos and Soul Reaver to their portfolio.
Electronic Arts
This American-based software giant publishes games across all platforms. Their best-known titles include "Black and White" and "James Bond 007: Nightfire".
Empire Interactive
A UK-based publisher of Xbox, PlayStation 2 and PC games such as Total Immersion Racing.
Excalibur Publishing
Oxfordshire based PC publisher responsible for titles such as Maximus XV Abraham Strong - Space Mercenary, and Star Wolves.
f
Flashpoint Games.
Founded for the express purpose of delivering inovitive and unique games. Current project is eXtreme Demolition
Fox Interactive
Fox publish many successful film and TV-based games including Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Die Hard and Simpsons titles.
FusionLabs
Publisher of Wanted Guns and Customplay Golf, based in Northamtonshire.
g
Game Factory Interactive
Russian based publisher of games such asWarfare and Jagged Alliance 3D
GMX Media
PC title publishers looking to move into the console market with Extreme 4x4
Got Gme Entertainment
Multi-format publisher, founded by fifteen year industry veteran Howard Horowitz.
Graphsim
US Publisher of Apple Mac conversions of PC games, dipping a toe into the PC market with Falcon 4.0
h
Hasbro Interactive
Hasbro mainly publish PC titles such as "Magic: The Gathering" and "Rollercoaster Tycoon".
Hip Interactive
UK based publishers, who's work includes Stolen and the upcoming FPS - Pariah.
i
Ignition Entertainment
Developers of Pool Paradis for the PC and all major consoles.
Infogrames
A French-based developer and publisher of next-generation titles, which include the Driver and Unreal Tournament games.
ITE Media
A Danish company that publishes titles based on the Hugo the Troll franchise for PC, PlayStation 2 and Game Boy Advance.
j
Jaleco Entertainment
Publishers of various multi-platform games including "Nightcaster", "Trailer Park Tycoon" and "Karnaaj Rally".
JoWood Productions
A UK-based publisher that mainly releases PC games such as "Aquanox" and "Spellforce: The Order of Dawn".
Just Flight
Publishers of plane and scenario add-ons for Microsoft Flight Simulator and Combat Flight Simulator.
Just Trains
The peopled behind The Severn Valley Railway, Train Driver and the Trainz Railway Simulator series for the PC.
k
Kalisto Entertainment
A French publisher, probably best known for their futuristic, film-based racing game "NYRacer - The Fifth Element".
Kemco Europe
Publishers of Xbox, GameCube, PlayStation 2 and GBA titles such as "Batman: Dark Tomorrow".
Koch Media
Koch are handling the publishing for the online space-sim X2: The Threat, among other PC and PS2 games.
Konami
The creators of all things Metal Gear publish many of their own titles worldwide across all platforms.
l
Lighthouse Interactive
Currently in the process of publishing in Europe, Keepsake for Wicked Studios of Canada.
Liquid Games
Liquid Games publishes arange of titles that has been designed to hit casual gamers with aggressive price points and mass-market content.
LucasArts
Publisher of many games, including the obscure 'Star Wars' games that few people would have heard of.
m
Majesco
Publishers of titles such as Advent Rising, Black & White Creatures and Psychonauts.
Matrix Games
Publishing compnay set up by gamers based on Statten Island, New York.
Microids
Microids is a French publisher that publishes and develops games for European territories.
Microsoft
After producing many successful PC titles, Microsoft now also publishes first-party games for their games console, the Xbox.
Midway Games Inc.
Developer and publisher of old and new games for all video game platforms.
Mindscape
Formerly known as The Learning Company, now set to publish Legacy Interactive's E.R.
n
Namco
Fantastic reputation for some great titles for all the major consoles and handhelds.
NCSoft
Publishers fo Lineage, Auto Assault and City of Heroes. Based in Asia.
Nevrax
French publisher and developer of MMPOGS such as the large in scope The Saga of Ryzom.
Nintendo
Not only an accomplished console producer, but also a great software publisher, Nintendo distributes first party GameCube software.
Nokia
Finnish telecomunications giant, creator of the N-Gage smartphone amongst others.
NovaLogic
An American-based developer and global publisher of PC and next-gen console titles, whose previous games include Delta Force and Comanche.
o
Oxygen Interactive
Publisher of games on all major formats. Founded in 2002, they are a publisher to watch in the future.
p
Play It
Games publisher currently working on America's Ten Most Wanted for all consoles and PC.
Playlogic
Publishers based in The Netherlands, who are responsible for title like Gene Troopers, Inuits and Knights of the Temple 2.
r
Rising Star Games
Publishers of titles such as Harvest Moon: More Friends Of Mineral Town, Bubble Bobble Revolution and Rainbow Islands Revolution.
Rockstar
High quality developer turned publisher with something of a Midas touch for quality games.
Russobit-M
A Russian publisher of PC software, which includes the action-RPG, Xenus.
s
SCi Games
UK based publishers of games including Constantine and Conflict Vietnam.
SEGA
After a brief stint of Atari publishing SEGA titles in Europe, now the Japanese giant has shifted focus back to their own department.
Sony
The Japanese-based technology giant publishes a large number of games for their PlayStation and PS2 consoles.
Square Enix
Publishers and developers of the Final Fantasy sequence of games amongst other achievements.
Strategy First
Developers and publishers of such games as O.R.B. and Disciples 2.
t
Take Two Interactive
Publishers of the Mafia series, the Max Payne franchise and titles such as Close Combat: First to Fight.
TDK Interactive
Rather large multi-format publisher that has released many games based on popular franchises. They release many games based on major motion pictures, video franchises, popular literature and popular culture.
Termite
Small multi format pubisher that began as Insomnia Games.
The Adventure Company
Division of Dreamcatcher Interactive. America's biggest publisher of Advanture games.
THQ
A multi-platform publisher, that has an impressive back-catalogue of games including Red Faction and many wrestling titles.
Tri Synergy
Tri Synergy's mission is to provide software developers with a profitable solution to publishing and distribution in the North American retail market, while allowing its partners to maintain complete control of their products and properties.
u
Typhoon Games
Typhoon Games Ltd. was founded in August 2001 in Hong Kong as a game developing and publishing company that recognizes the great potential of the gaming industry in Asia. They work with developers in that region, as well as those from Europe and North America to create and localize PC games for the Asian audiences.
Ubi Soft
French game publisher founded in 1986 and going stronger than ever. Publishes such varied games as the Rayman franchise through to the Tom Clancy games.
v
Vidis
Games publisher since 1983. Started out as an online publisher and helped publish the 3DO with Panasonic.
Still going strong and releasing games for all formats.
Vivendi Universal Interactive
Publishers of some of the most interesting TV and Movie tie-ins, including The X-Files, Buffy and Battlestar Galactica.
w
Wanadoo
A French publisher with games such as Curse: The Eye of Isis.
Whiptail Interactive
US based publisher with offices in the UK and Spain, set to publish Restricted Area.
x
Xing Interactive
Duthc based publisher who has just signed a deal to distribute Skool's Out across Europe.
Xplosiv
Budget label of Empire Interactive with some interestig title, both old and new.
z
Zoo
Zoo Digital Group develop various forms of gaming entertainment, from PlayStation 2 games to interactive DVD content.

If people know some publishers that I haven't mentioned then please add them in this thread!
As a little sidenote: I've listed some AAA publishers but chances are maybe about 95% that they won't be interested in your games, but you never know, so in case you've wondered that's why I've added them too...

Cheers
Posted By: Ithicus

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/27/05 23:58

Sticky this, any mod. This is extrmely useful information.
Posted By: Jamie_Lynn

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/28/05 00:00

This is a link that Realspawn posted a while back. Also great.

http://www.gameboomers.com/gamepublishers.html
Posted By: fastlane69

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/28/05 00:57

helps if you press the "notify moderator" button folks.
Posted By: Ithicus

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/28/05 01:27

I thought that was only for emergencies, like sex offending, insulting when you really mean it (see me and Toz's insult thread. Were just joking around) etc. Sort of like "the big red button you never push"

McLaren
Posted By: PHeMoX

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/28/05 14:46

Quote:

This is a link that Realspawn posted a while back. Also great.

http://www.gameboomers.com/gamepublishers.html




Wow, amazing link!!
Now let's get a moderator to work, now where can I find that 'notify mod button'

Cheers
Posted By: Bilbo

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/28/05 15:03

at the bottom of you post under your sig lol
Posted By: Orange Brat

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/30/05 09:17

http://www.adventuredevelopers.com/newsdetail.php?action=view&newsid=592

Quote:


Manifesto Games to market indie games
September 28, 2005







Interesting news for independent developers has reached us today. Game industry veterans Greg Costikyan and Johnny Wilson have founded Manifesto Games, a venture aiming to promote and shape the independent games market over the next few years.









From the press release: "Three types of games will be offered: truly independent, original content from creators without publisher funding; the best PC games from smaller PC game publishers, including games in existing genres like wargames, flight sims, and graphic adventures; and niche MMOs."









More information about Manifesto Games can be found on their website, and on Greg Costikyan's weblog.




Posted By: Calined

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/30/05 09:20

what is about greenballgames?
Posted By: Matt_Aufderheide

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/30/05 14:28

Quote:

Tri Synergy




I had a game published by TriSynergy, they got it produced and shipped all around the US to many retail stores. They didnt do a lot marketing though. I think it eventually sold out the intial run, which wasnt huge. My company never saw a penny. We made more money selling the game ourselves online.

I'm not saying they are dishonest..just that you are better off selling your game online yourself than using them or someone like them.. getting into retail without big advertising money backing you is a like throwing your game out the window. Most of the other compnaies wont even look at your stuff, or if they do they won't sign off. My advice to most poeple here, sell your games your self. The idea that "all you need is a great demo and then the publishers will all sign on" is a pipedream, plain and simple.

One thing you find with some of these poeple in publishing, is they are very nice to you.. they say, yesh we like your game..then when it comes to putting down the cash they disappear. Our company president spent all day on the phone with publishers and marketer for months.. and got all sorts of run arounds.. man what a roller coaster.

Do yourself a favor, if you have a product you believe in, dont give up on it, but try marketing it yourself, dont expect to get rich, and dont worry about big name companies.
Posted By: Orange Brat

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 09/30/05 21:36

Agreed. With broadband being much more widespread, and the public becoming more internet savvy, I see no reason to make someone else rich by going through them. If you play your cards right, and promote in all the right places, you're audience will find you. If you have a niche product, that will make it even easier to get the word out to those that count.

Online distribution will become more and more common. I'm going to try and follow the Telltale Games model. Online distribution, shorter games at a cheaper price, and new episodes every 3-6 months. It's an experiment, but what I'm doing gels with that model.
Posted By: Matt_Aufderheide

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/01/05 11:12

Yeah.. for once you and I are toally in agreement
Posted By: Orange Brat

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/01/05 16:44

Let's not get all mushy about it.
Posted By: PHeMoX

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/03/05 12:48

Quote:

Do yourself a favor, if you have a product you believe in, dont give up on it, but try marketing it yourself, dont expect to get rich, and dont worry about big name companies.




Well, yeah, but getting 5000+ views alone on just a website can be really hard, or it will cost quite some promotion money! Sure, if your product is good, then it will be easier, no doubt about that, but companies like Xing interactive do a great job of promoting your games, and yes they get quite some money out of it too unfortunately...
As for getting rich, we are indie developers and hobbyists, everyone who thinks he is going to get rich, hasn't really understood the difference with the pro's.

Cheers
Posted By: Orange Brat

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/04/05 19:46

Quote:


GMX Media
PC title publishers looking to move into the console market with Extreme 4x4





This outfit is crooked. Both GMX and Digital Jesters get a tongue lashing from "wael" on the Adventure Gamers forum. Their studio, Frogwares, produces games based on the Sherlock Holmes license, and the up and coming Around the World in 80 Days spinoff, "80 Days". He's specifically talking about the last Holmes game, The Silver Earring in his tirade(s). It starts about halfway down:

http://forums.adventuregamers.com/showthread.php?t=10959
Posted By: Nadester

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/04/05 21:34

I'll make it sticky for the time being.
Posted By: Gho5tFac3K1llah

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/04/05 23:02

Quote:

STEAM - THE ELECTRONIC DISTRIBUTION PLATFORM

The era of electronic distribution has arrived. Steam provides the ability to distribute games and other content directly to customers. Steam opens up new channels of distribution and allows for non-traditional product offerings while increasing profit margins to content creators. Publishing your game on Steam gives you access to the largest community of online gamers anywhere with over 5 million registered users.

Steam also provides integrated tools for publishing content directly to customers, flexible billing, ensured-version control, anti-cheating, anti-piracy, game-server browser functionality, an in-game instant messaging platform, and more. Many third-parties are already taking advantage of the benefits Steam offers. Contact Valve to discuss opportunities.




Straight from Valve's business section. This could be a great oppurtunity for users of GameStudio.
Posted By: Ithicus

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 10/05/05 00:36

Nice find Domingo. Steem is pretty usful for distributers, but not for users.

It could be a good opurtunity for indies, but look what valve publishes. If your game doesnt meet or excede HL2 in every way, they will brush you out the door.

Still, its pretty interesting...
McLaren
Posted By: HeelX

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 12/04/05 23:58

Maybe it is useful to have such a list but it is useless to just count all avaiable developers in one list. For a developer its important to know a range from small hobbyist, indie team with some funds, big teams and companies, game qualities ranging from A to AAA+ and of course types of published media (genre? shareware? onlinedistribution?) and what is also important: in which country they are settled.

For me it would be important to know a small list of german publishers that also support indies with an online distribution (no hardplace marketing). Its amusing to be on this forum to have a link to the EA site with a caption like "here is the great publishers list when you search for one". LOL!

I'm not lazy but I doubt the usefulness of this list. Does anyone who has a bit knowledge and/or experience with this kind of topic so that he can structure it a bit more? If I had a clue I would do so.

Thanks
Christian Behrenberg
Posted By: Inestical

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 12/15/05 08:41

Quote:

Nokia
Finnish telecomunications giant, creator of the N-Gage smartphone amongst others.




whaaa?? Nokia is publishin' games? I think you mean mobilephone games tho..
but thanks for remembering it being finnish
Posted By: Orange Brat

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 01/12/06 03:06

Digital Jesters is on this list, but they are getting liquidated:

http://www.gamespot.com/news/6142224.html
Posted By: BigDaz

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games! - 01/23/06 22:03

Funsta.co.uk is Codemaster's new casual gaming wing. This is what they have to say which sounds quite promising.

Quote:


We are always on the lookout for promising new games that we can help bring to market, whether you're a bedroom developer with an innovative prototype or a development studio with a nearly complete masterpiece. Funsta can help with development, marketing and distribution. Please contact us at: gameideas@funsta.com



Posted By: fastlane69

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games! - 02/13/06 19:25

Can we move this sticky to the new Business Forum please?
Thanks.
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games! - 02/14/06 14:07

Quote:

Can we move this sticky to the new Business Forum please?
Thanks.




Done.
Posted By: ulf

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 04/12/07 14:13

after haveing sent out emails to probably ~15 of german casual game publishers who actually have some games in the store i can tell you the following:

(just for your information, iam trying to get a publisher for my game utz wollewutz, wich is compared to other casual games out there not that bad in my mind)

-most of them dont even respond
-like 2-3 respond and say "no thanks it doesnt fit our portfolio"
-if you phone them and ask again after like 1 week, most of them say "yes we will look into this later, you hear from us" or you dont even get the phone number of the person responsible and some telephone lady wont put you through

the conclusion is that casual games market is flooded with cheap, cheaper, cheapest low quality stuff and its not worth for publishers anymore to market a game.
publishers get flooded with crap so they dont take time to respond anymore.

in germany you will get real good games 1year old for 5-10€ you cant even if you buy them all play them all. why should anyone buy a casual game if he gets a full game for the same price?


also this list here is pretty old and dont even think about contacting the big boys on this list unless your game can compete with farcry 2.

maybe we should work on a new list of indiepublishers and portals.
ill supply you soon with a little list i made, hope someone can contribute some portal contact emails?
Posted By: PHeMoX

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 04/12/07 15:26

This list wasn't made with casual games in mind. Casual games normally are sold purely over the internet. You hardly ever see them end in a box on a shelf. There have been other valuable links to a lot of portals in a more recent thread.

Quote:

~15 of german casual game publishers




Which ones?

You always have a small chance, that is, if they are willing to take a look at it. Having 15 publishers say no really is nothing compared to my experience. It's not easy and it takes time, it also depends a lot on how you present your game. If you link to a website in a email, make sure it looks pro, all sorts of things can prevent a publisher from saying 'okey we'll do it'.

Quote:


whaaa?? Nokia is publishin' games? I think you mean mobilephone games tho..
but thanks for remembering it being finnish




Yes, they do actually and not just mobilephone games.

Cheers
Posted By: zazang

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 04/12/07 16:48

The sad part is that the first and foremost criterea these days is becoming
graphics qaulity and by graphics quality I mean that your game should have
good sketched art and not 'programmer" art..the other thing is that you should have a game that the publisher was kind of looking for...Years back I got lucky
because one pubpisher was looking for mass market low budget games and they accepted the game..
I know of a professional project that has taken 6 years of development in A5..
its an extremely professional and uniqye project with movie quality voice acting
but since it started 6 years back so they were the A5 days and now the game looks outdated because of lack of shaders etc..consequently,most of the publishers rejected the game just after the screnshots and trailer...this sounds depressing indeed,so these days I think its the wisest thing to invest in game art if you plan to sell your game !
Posted By: Damocles

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 07/27/07 19:28

Again:

Please Sticky someone of the moderators the Thread, or at least the top post with the list of Publishers.
(updated if needed)

There is also this nice link:

http://www.gamona.de/publisher.htm
Posted By: mikaldinho

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games! - 02/18/10 11:11

i contacted ea about whether or not they would publish a game of mine and the reply i got said "we appreciate your intrest but due to company policy we do not accept games from third parties".

they dont accept from 3rd parties so they should be taken off the list
Posted By: Kiavash2k

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 11/13/10 06:25

a big list of big companies
Posted By: Sajeth

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 11/13/10 16:19

Originally Posted By: Kiavash2k
a big list of big companies

A big useless list, to be precise.
Posted By: PHeMoX

Re: A list of (possible) publishers for your games - 03/24/11 12:20

Originally Posted By: Sajeth
Originally Posted By: Kiavash2k
a big list of big companies

A big useless list, to be precise.


I know it's an ancient topic, but I'll respond anyway just to clear something up.

Times have changed, online distribution has become much more attractive and easy, marketing can be done through Facebook, Twitter, Youtube, online game portals, game magazines that do feature indie games and what not, but then again that list is about 6 years old anyway, so what would you expect?

It makes sense that many games won't get any attention from the bigger publishers or even online game portals, because frankly many games really aren't worth it. Best bet for those is selling them yourself through your own website.
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