Video games in Russia
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Russia has one of the largest video games player bases in the world, with an estimated 65.2 million players nationwide as of 2018.[1] Despite piracy being widespread in the Russian gaming industry,[2] by 2019, the market more than doubled over the course of five years to the worth of over $2 billion.[3]
In 2001, Russia became the first country in the world to officially recognize competitive video gaming as a sport.[4]
History
[edit]The history of gaming in Russia began in the early 1980s in the Soviet Union, when various personal computers such as the Atari 400/800, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum 48/128 were brought to the country from the United States, Europe, Japan, and China.[5] At the same time, a local brand, Electronika, released a series of portable game consoles which were mostly clones of Nintendo products. By the mid 80s, Soviet programmers and enthusiasts began trying to develop their own games.[6][7] The most famous Russian game designer of this era is Alexey Pajitnov, who is best known for creating Tetris.[8][9]
The Dendy, a Taiwanese hardware clone of the Famicom/Nintendo Entertainment System, was released for the Russian market in 1992.[10] By 1994, over one million Dendy units were sold in Russia.[11] The Dendy went on to sell a total of 6 million units in Russia and other post-Soviet states.[10]
In 2010, Ministry of Communications and Mass Media of Russia encouraged Russian video game companies to make video games that were deemed "patriotic," as it was felt that foreign video game publishers made games that were anti-Russian.[12]
Arcades
[edit]The first Soviet arcade game machines did not contain digital graphics, and the games' interface had to be emulated with help of physical objects.[13][14][15]
Russian game developers
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (August 2020) |
Company | Location | Founded |
---|---|---|
1C Company | Moscow | 1991 |
Eagle Dynamics | Moscow (Founded) Switzerland (Current) |
1991 |
GFI Russia | Zelenograd | 1996 |
Nival | Saint Petersburg (Founded) 3 offices (RU & Europe) |
1996 |
Saber Interactive | Saint Petersburg (Founded), Fort Lauderdale, FL (HQ) Multiple offices (Worldwide) |
2001 |
Ice-Pick Lodge | Moscow | 2002 |
Nevosoft | Saint Petersburg (Founded) Moscow (Other offices) |
2002 |
Targem Games | Yekaterinburg | 2002 |
Unigine Corp | Tomsk (Founded) Clemency, Luxembourg (HQ) Multiple offices (Worldwide) |
2005 |
Allods Team | Moscow, Voronezh, Bishkek | 2006 |
ZeptoLab | Moscow Barcelona (HQ) |
2008 |
Pixonic | Moscow (Founded) Limassol (HQ) Multiple offices (RU & Europe) |
2009 |
Lazy Bear Games (Ex-GameJam. Renamed in 2015.) |
Saint Petersburg (Founded) | 2010 |
Alawar | Novosibirsk | 2011 |
Brainy Studio | Perm | 2013 |
Hungry Couch Games | Moscow | 2019 |
Moon Moose | Saint Petersburg | 2019 |
SoftLab-NSK Ltd. (See RU wiki) [a] |
Novosibirsk | 1988 |
G5 Entertainment AB | Russia (Founded) Stockholm (HQ) Multiple offices (RU, UA & worldwide) |
2001 |
Deus Craft | Novosibirsk | 2003 |
Game Factory Interactive Ltd. (Founder & as developer) |
Moscow (Founded) Multiple offices (Worldwide) |
2003 |
Sigma Team (See Simple wiki) |
Novosibirsk | 2003 |
Katauri Interactive (See RU wiki) |
Vladivostok (Founded) Kaliningrad (Current) |
2004 |
KranX Productions (See RU wiki) |
Kaliningrad | 2004 |
Haggard Games | Rostov-on-Dov | 2005 |
Trickster Games | Russia | 2005 |
CarX Technologies | Moscow (Founded) Multiple offices (Worldwide) |
2006 |
Destiny.Games | Moscow | 2008 |
101XP.com (Also online games) |
Moscow (Founded) Nicosia (HQ) Multiple offices (RU, Europe & CN) |
2009 |
Game Garden | Moscow (Founded) San Francisco (HQ) |
2009 |
Colibri Games [b] | Russia (Founded)[16][17][18] Stavanger (Current)[19] |
2010 |
Flashback Games | Saint Petersburg [20][21][22][23] | 2010 |
8floor Ltd | Russia London (HQ) |
2011 |
NeoDinamika | Kaliningrad | 2011 |
Clarus Victoria | Moscow (Founded) Multiple RU areas |
2013 |
Four Quarters | Russia | 2013 |
LLC Blini Games | Saint Petersburg | 2013 |
Tequilabyte Studio | Tomsk | 2013 |
Tortuga Team | Kaliningrad | 2013 |
Do My Best Games | Moscow | 2014 |
Fair Games Studio (Also GD Forge) |
Kazan | 2014 |
Glyph Worlds | Krasnoyarsk (Founded) UA (Another office) |
2014 |
Nearga Team | Moscow (Founded) Multiple offices (Worldwide) |
2014 |
Morteshka | Perm | 2015 |
SK Team | Moscow (Founded) Multiple RU, UA & BY areas |
2015 |
Ktulhu Solutions | Moscow | 2016 |
Owlcat Games (See RU wiki) |
Moscow Nicosia (HQ) |
2016 |
RtsDimon | Chelyabinsk | 2016 |
Rumata Lab | Nizhny Novgorod | 2016 |
Unfrozen Studio | Saint Petersburg Limassol (HQ) |
2016 |
Alter Games | Moscow | 2017 |
Dark Crystal Games | Saint Petersburg (Founded) Varna (HQ) Multiple RU areas |
2017 |
Mighty Morgan | Saint Petersburg | 2017 |
Mundfish | Moscow Rockville, Maryland (Corporate) |
2017 |
RedRuins Softworks | Moscow | 2017 |
Tiamat Games | Moscow | 2017 |
Wild Forest Studio | Nizhny Novgorod (Founded) Multiple offices (Europe) |
2017 |
Mono Studio | Samara (Founded) Brooklyn (Office) |
2018 |
Zelart | Volgograd | 2018[24] |
BitLight Games | Russia | 2019 |
Black Caviar Games | Krasnodar | 2019 |
Rummy Games studio (Ex-MV Games. Renamed in 2020.) |
Moscow | 2019 |
Different Sense Games | Saint Petersburg | 2020 |
Door 407 game studio | Zelenograd (Founded), UK (HQ) |
2020 |
Frozen Line | N/A | 2020 |
Kinderril Games | Russia | 2020 |
MadRock Games | Moscow | 2020 |
Magic Hazard | Kyiv & Russia | 2020 |
Mihanikus Games | Moscow | 2020 |
Mr. Pink | Russia | 2020 |
uglycoal | Russia | 2020 |
Game Art Pioneers | Moscow | 2021 |
Company | Location | Founded |
---|---|---|
Nikita Online | Moscow (Founded) Rostov-on-Don (Another office) |
1991 |
MY.GAMES (Also casual dev) |
Moscow (Founded), Mountain View, CA (2nd main branch) Amsterdam (HQ) Multiple offices (Worldwide) |
2009 |
Battlestate Games | Saint Petersburg | 2012 |
GFA Games | Moscow | 2016 |
Company | Location | Founded |
---|---|---|
HeroCraft | Kaliningrad (Founded) Nikosia (HQ) Multiple RU & UA areas |
2002 |
Elephant Games | Yoshkar-Ola (Founded) Yerevan (HQ) Multiple RU areas |
2003 |
Ciliz Co. Ltd. | Saint Petersburg | 2006 |
DominiGames (Smolyanskiy O.V) | Voronezh | 2006 |
Daily Magic Productions | Seattle (HQ, Founded) Kaliningrad (Regional) Extra office (UA) |
2009 |
Game Insight | Moscow (Founded) Vilnius (HQ) Multiple RU, Europe & ID areas |
2009 |
Red Brix Wall | Saint Petersburg Nicosia (HQ) |
2017 |
Company | Location | Founded | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Gameplay First LLC | Russia (Maybe Moscow) | 2018 | Co-development |
Defunct video game developers in Russia
[edit]Company | Location | Founded | Closure |
---|---|---|---|
Creat Studios | Saint Petersburg (Founded) Canton, Massachusetts (HQ in 2005) United States (Another office) |
1990 | 2012-2013 (Stopped making games. Started making websites.) 2021 (Closed) |
Lesta Studio (Till buyout by Wargaming) | Saint Petersburg | 1991 | 2011 (Buyout) |
Russian Soft | N/A | 1991? | 1991? |
DOCA Studios | Zelenograd | 1992? | 1997? |
Akella | Moscow | 1993 | 2012 |
StepGames Inc. | Moscow | 1994 | 2012 |
K-D Lab Game Development (See RU wiki) |
Kaliningrad | 1995 | 2012 (President also setup KranX) |
New Media Generation | Moscow | 1995 | 2015 (Game distribution ceased in 2010) |
S.K.I.F. (Ex-SBG Studio) | Moscow | 1996 | 2001 (Former staff setup Primal Software) |
ITEM Multimedia, Ltd. | Moscow | 1997 | 2014 (Inactive afterwards. Studio was 1st closed in 2004, reopened in 2010.)[25] |
Saturn Plus | Voronezh | 1997 | 2011 (Closed. Liquidated in 2016.) |
Apeiron | Saint Petersburg | 1999 | 2010 (Inactive afterwards)[26][27] |
Burut Creative Team | Voronezh | 1999 | 2013 |
Elemental Games | Vladivostok | 1999 | 2015 (Some staff members moved to Katauri Interactive) |
Russobit-M (Founder & as developer) | Moscow | 1999 | 2013 |
Avalon Style Entertainment (Till buyout by 1C Company) | Moscow | 2000 | 2011 |
Quazar Studio | Timashevsk | 2000 | 2009 |
IgorLab Software | Russia | 2001 | 2012 (Inactive afterwards) |
Primal Software | Moscow | 2001 | 2008 (Inactive afterwards. Studio was setup by former staff of S.K.I.F.)[28] |
Revolt Games | Moscow | 2001 | 2014 (Inactive afterwards) |
SkyRiver Studios (See RU wiki, FR wiki) |
Samara | 2001 | 2008 (Studio lead disappeared) |
VZ.lab | Saint Petersburg | 2002 | 2010 |
Alawar DreamDale | Irkutsk (HQ), Donetsk | 2002 | 2015? (Donetsk studio closed in March 2014) |
SkyFallen Entertainment (See RU wiki), (See UA wiki) |
Voronezh | 2002 | 2012 |
TrashMasters Studios (Also 'TM Studios') | Moscow | 2002 | 2012 |
.dat media LLC | Russia | 2003 | 2011 |
СНК-Games (Also 'SNK-Games') | Moscow (Founded) Multiple RU areas |
2003 | 2016 |
DTF Games (See RU wiki) |
Saint Petersburg | 2003 | 2004 (Ceased game development after 2004. Reverted to parent company's web publication.) |
Orion Software | Russia | 2003 | 2015 |
SPLine Inc. | N/A | 2003 | 2012 |
DayTerium | Kaliningrad | 2004 | 2015 (Changed to movie distribution) |
Dynamic Pixels | Moscow | 2004 | 2019 (Team moved to Eerie Guest Studios in 2020) |
EleFun Games | Novosibirsk | 2004 (Est.) | 2017 (Inactive afterwards) |
IceHill Entertainment | Yekaterinburg | 2004 | 2010 |
Litera Laboratories | Voronezh | 2004 | 2017 (Inactive afterwards) |
World Forge | Voronezh | 2004 | 2009 |
4Reign Studios | Kursk | 2005 | 2009 |
I-Jet Media (Founder & as developer) | Yekaterinburg | 2005 | 2007 |
Phantomery Interactive (See RU wiki) |
Saint Petersburg | 2005 | 2010 (Inactive afterwards) |
Yard Team | Russia | 2005 | 2014[29] |
Quant Games LLC | Moscow | 2007 | 2010 (Inactive afterwards. Studio was setup by former staff of S.K.I.F. & Primal Software)[30] |
General Arcade | Singapore (Founded) Multiple RU areas, UA |
2012 | 2022 (RU branch closed early 2022. Co-dev, porting services.)[31] |
Uroboros Games | Saint Petersburg | 2016 | 2020 (Former staff setup Different Sense Games) |
Cracked Heads Games | Yakutsk | 2017 | 2019 (Inactive afterwards) |
Video game publishers in Russia
[edit]Company | Location | Founded | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Art Vostok | Omsk (Founded) Limassol (HQ) |
2019 | Publisher & dev. Co dev (2d/3d). |
AtomTeam (aka. Atent Games, Ltd) |
Tomsk (Founded)[32] Riga (HQ) Multi offices (Europe) |
2014 | Publisher & dev |
Cats who play CJSC | Moscow | 2006 | Publisher & dev |
Efril | Temryuk | 2016 | Publisher & dev |
Flox Studios Ltd (Ex-Snow Arc Studio Ltd in 2012 to 2015) |
Moscow (Founded) London (Another office) |
2012 | Publisher & dev |
HypeTrain Digital | Russia (Founded) Nicosia (HQ) Multi offices (Armenia, CA) |
2015 | Publisher |
Innova | Moscow (Founded) Luxembourg (HQ) |
2006 | Publisher |
Konfa Games | Saint Petersburg | 2017 | Publisher & dev |
LLC Noostyche | Samara | 2014 | Publisher & dev |
META Publishing | Moscow (Founded) Nicosia (HQ) |
2019 | Publisher |
Moregames Entertainment | Moscow | 2005 | Publisher & dev |
Motorsport Games | Miami (HQ) Moscow (Dev office) Multi offices (Worldwide) |
2018 | Publisher, dev & eSports organizer |
Nostalgames Studio | Russia (Founded) Multi offices (UA, UZ) |
2014 | Publisher & dev. Ex-Kremlingames (2014-2024). |
Playkot | Saint Petersburg (Founded) Limassol (HQ) |
2009 | Publisher & dev. Mobile games. |
RainStyle Games Limited | Voronezh (Founded) Limassol (Game dev's HQ) |
2019 | Publisher & dev. Offshoot from defunct RainStyle production (2010-2022).[33] |
Snowbird Games | Moscow | 2008 | Publisher & dev. Firm was set up by former staff of Snowball Interactive/Studios. |
Solarsuit Games | Tomsk (Founded) Königsberg (HQ) Multi offices (Europe) |
2018 | Publisher & dev |
Soviet Games | N/A | 2014 | Publisher & dev (Core & mobile games) |
Synthetic Domain | Sakhalin (Founded) GE (HQ) |
2018 | Publisher & dev (Turn-based Tactics) |
WallRus Group | Moscow | 2017 | Publisher & dev |
Yandex.Games | Moscow (Founded & HQ) | 1997 (Company) | Publisher |
Defunct game publishers from Russia
[edit]Company | Location | Founded | Defunct | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
DOKA Studios (Ex-Doka in 1987 to 1997. Ex-DOKA Media in 1997 to 2005) |
Moscow | 1987 | 2001 | Publisher & former dev. Ceased publishing games in 2001. |
IDDK Group | Moscow | 1995 | 2012 | Ceased publishing games. |
Snowball Studios | Moscow | 1996 | 2010 | Old 1996 name: "Snowball Interactive". Publisher, dev & localizer. Merged with 1C-SoftClub. |
Discus Games | Russia | 2000 | 2008 | Publisher, distribution & dev. Inactive afterwards.[34] |
Media-Service 2000 | Moscow | 2000 | 2009 | Ceased games publishing in 2006 & game sales in 2008. |
Gaijin Entertainment | Moscow & Belarus (Founded), Other RU places (Till early 2010's) Hungary (HQ)[35] Offices in Europe & worldwide (Current) |
2002 | 2015 | Moved HQ and development staff to Hungary & other EU countries. |
Playrix | Vologda (Founded) Dublin (HQ) Multi offices (Europe) |
2004 | 2022 | Closed down offices in RU & BY. |
LLC Intenzibne | Magas | 2012 | 2020 | Publisher & dev. Inactive afterwards. |
Azur Games | Moscow (Founded) Larnaca (HQ) Multi offices (Caucuses, Dubai) |
2016 | 2022 | Closed down offices in RU. |
Demographics and popularity
[edit]One in 5 Russians self report that they play video games, according to the Moscow Times.[36] Video games enjoy mass appeal in Russia.[1][37][38] Males make up 58% and females 42% of gamers.[39] Russians tend to be impulse buyers.[40] According to Newzoo 60% of PC gamers are male and 46% of mobile gamers are female.[41][42]
According to J'son and Partners Consulting, the biggest growth in gaming in Russia was mobile and PC games in 2016.[43]
Notes
[edit]- ^ SoftLab-Nsk Ltd. is a graphics studio formed by a scientific institute. It has two functions - one for making hardware/software for multimedia & TV broadcasting; the other one for VR systems, imaging systems for training simulators and computer games. They released 4 trucking sims on Windows in 1998 to 2009, but no more new commercial game.
- ^ Not the same as the German developer Kolibri Games
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Russia Games Market 2018". Archived from the original on November 29, 2020.
- ^ "Welcome To Russia, Where Most Of Your Friends Are Video Game Pirates". Kotaku. Archived from the original on November 1, 2012. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
- ^ "Yandex: Russian game market doubled in five years to $2 billion". January 22, 2020.
- ^ "Competitive video gaming now officially a sport in Russia". East-West Digital News. Retrieved 2016-07-26.
- ^ Goodfellow, Cat (18 December 2014). "Beyond Tetris: a brief history of patriotic video gaming in Russia". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
- ^ "Какими были первые советские персональные компьютеры". Российская газета. 4 December 2019.
- ^ "Советские компьютерные игры". Форум Альтернативной Истории (ФАИ).
- ^ "Автор "Тетриса" о простоте и гениальности своей игры". Look At Me. June 6, 2014.
- ^ Goodfellow, Cat (December 18, 2014). "Beyond Tetris: a brief history of patriotic video gaming in Russia". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ a b "Приставка Dendy: Как Виктор Савюк придумал первый в России поп-гаджет" [Dendy Prefix: How Viktor Savyuk Came Up With The First Pop-gadget In Russia]. The Firm's Secret (in Russian). 9 August 2016. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
- ^ "Полугодовые итоги по бизнесу Dendy — К "русскому Nintendo" добавилась японская Sega" [Talk of Japanese competitor Sega entering Russian market] (in Russian). Kommersant. July 19, 1994. Retrieved 2010-03-26.
- ^ "Russia attempts to turn the patriotic tide by funding new video games". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
- ^ "Музей советских игровых автоматов открылся на новом месте". The Village. August 11, 2011.
- ^ "Russians recall bygone era with Soviet game museum". Reuters. June 14, 2007 – via www.reuters.com.
- ^ "Russian video arcade captures dying culture". Salon. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
- ^ "Colibri's dev". Indie DB. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ "Colibri's dev". Mod DB. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ "Colibri's FILE Festival page". Electronic Language International Festival. 21 January 2016. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ "Colibri dev's Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ "Flashback Games' About Us". Flashback Games' official website. Archived from the original on January 9, 2022. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
- ^ "Flashback Games founder's Steam bio". Steam. Valve. Retrieved June 9, 2022.
- ^ "Flashback Games' OGDB page". Online Games-Datenbank (in German). Archived from the original on January 27, 2021. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
- ^ "Flashback's Panzer Corps 2 review". 4Players (in German). Funke Digital GmbH. Archived from the original on October 26, 2021. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
- ^ Ellie Harisova (21 December 2020). "(Zelart) "There Is No Light: Environment Design in a Dark 2D Action-Adventure"". 80 Level. Archived from the original on October 23, 2021. Retrieved 22 September 2022.
- ^ "ITEM Multimedia's official website". www.item2m.com. Archived from the original on December 17, 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
- ^ "Apeiron's MobyGames bio". MobyGames. Atari SA. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
- ^ "Apeiron's official website". apeiron-games.ru. Archived from the original on March 17, 2010. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
- ^ "Primal Software's official website". www.primal-soft.com. Archived from the original on March 10, 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
- ^ "Yard Team' official website". www.yardteam.org. Archived from the original on January 28, 2022. Retrieved 24 December 2022.
- ^ "Quant Games' official website". www.quantgames.com. Archived from the original on July 20, 2022. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
- ^ "General Arcade's official site". generalarcade.com. Archived from the original on February 14, 2022. Retrieved November 3, 2024.
- ^ Kompanets, Alexander. "AtomTeam founder's LinkedIn bio". LinkedIn. Microsoft. Retrieved 23 November 2022.
- ^ "RainStyle production's official website". rainstyle.ru. Archived from the original on December 4, 2022. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
- ^ "Discus Games' official website". www.dgames.ru. Archived from the original on March 19, 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
- ^ "Hungarian translation: Gamers have always been the soul of video game development". 24.hu (in Hungarian). September 18, 2022. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
- ^ Times, The Moscow (August 19, 2019). "1 in 5 Russians Are Gamers, Poll Says". The Moscow Times.
- ^ "Video Games Drive Media Market Growth". Moscow Times. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
- ^ Goodfellow, Catherine (2015). "ONLINE GAMING IN POST-SOVIET RUSSIA: PRACTICES, CONTEXTS AND DISCOURSES" (PDF). www.research.manchester.ac.uk. Retrieved 2020-04-17.
- ^ "An Insider's Guide to the Russian Game Industry | ironSource". Ironsrc.com. 22 August 2018. Retrieved 2020-04-17.
- ^ "Game Insight: Shedding light on Russia's game trends". Russia Beyond the Headlines. Retrieved 2013-05-07.
- ^ "Russian Game Industry Survey 2019". russia-promo.com.
- ^ "White Paper: Guide to Online Games Promotion in the Russian Market". russia-promo.com.
- ^ "Research of the global and Russian gaming market, 2016 - Контент и мобильные приложения | RUSSIAN ANALYTICS". json.tv.