Sponsored By

UK Retail's Top 100 Developers Named

British industry publication Develop Magazine has unveiled its inaugural Develop 100 list of companies, which ranks individual development studios according to its succes...

David Jenkins, Blogger

May 6, 2005

2 Min Read
Game Developer logo in a gray background | Game Developer

British industry publication Develop Magazine has unveiled its inaugural Develop 100 list of companies, which ranks individual development studios according to its success in financial terms at UK retail outlets. A supplement profiling all 100 companies was distributed free with trade paper MCV this week. The rankings for Develop 100 are calculated according to revenues generated at UK retail, using figures provided by ChartTrack. The data used comes from sales between January 1st 2004 and December 31st 2004, across all formats and price points. The top ten developers were listed as follows: 1. EA Canada - £93,513,089 ($176,889,836) generated at UK retail 2. Rockstar North - £71,067,230 ($134,425,159) 3. Maxis - £31,907,533 ($60,353,769) 4. EA Redwood Shores - £30,600,306 ($57,881,122) 5. Ubisoft Montreal - £22,930,009 ($43,375,877) 6. London Studios (SCEE) - £22,914,433 ($43,346,412) 7. KCE Tokyo (Konami) - £22,127,973 ($41,871,718) 8. Sonic Team - £20,762,935 ($39,288,721) 9. Codemasters - £19,153,610 ($36,243,472) 10. EA Los Angeles - £18,934,945 ($35,833,447) The strong perfomance of EA Canada in the UK market can be put down to the ongoing success of the FIFA Football franchise, for which the developer is responsible. The highest ranking UK studio was Grand Theft Auto and Manhunt developer Rockstar (nee DMA Design) at number two, while the highest ranked U.S. developer was The Sims creator Maxis at number three. Konami’s Tokyo studio was the highest ranked Japanese developer at number seven. "It's been an interesting exercise, and surprising not just because of the positions attained by some of the largest developers behind the largest games, but also how much each team contributed to the UK games industry," says Owain Bennallack, editor, Develop Magazine. "It's time, at last, for the developers themselves to get recognition, and we're confident the Develop 100 will become a much anticipated and much discussed industry publication."

About the Author

David Jenkins

Blogger

David Jenkins ([email protected]) is a freelance writer and journalist working in the UK. As well as being a regular news contributor to Gamasutra.com, he also writes for newsstand magazines Cube, Games TM and Edge, in addition to working for companies including BBC Worldwide, Disney, Amazon and Telewest.

Daily news, dev blogs, and stories from Game Developer straight to your inbox

You May Also Like