• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Who is the oldest game developer still in business?

pixlexic

Banned
Is it Activision? They have to at least be the oldest most successful game developer still going today.

I know Nintendo started around the same time as well.

I cannot really think of anymore game developers from that time that are stI'll going.
 
Nintendo has technically been around for 125 as a toy developer (among...other things).

So depends if you count games as toys?
 
I mean it has to be Nintendo... they were founded in 1889.

(yes, I know they weren't developing video games in 1889)
 
Nintendo has technically been around for 125 as a toy developer (among...other things).

So depends if you count games as toys?

well if we're going that route, Sega is 74 years old and has been making arcade games the entire time. Their arcade games predates video games, back when they made electro-mechanical arcade units:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gspc_2PLyeA

Sega arcade game from 1970, 7 years prior to the 2600.
 
I mean it has to be Nintendo... they were founded in 1889.

(yes, I know they weren't developing video games in 1889)

If the thread title question has no stipulations, I think this is the right answer. Does it matter what they were doing before? They were in business. That makes them the oldest.
 
Just video games.

Kind of crazy looking at some atari games seeing the Activision logo. It really hasn't changed much.

They have never been sold or bought out either right?
 
Is it Activision? They have to at least be the oldest most successful game developer still going today.

I know Nintendo started around the same time as well.

I cannot really think of anymore game developers from that time that are stI'll going.

EA started in the early '80s. I used to have the Joystik magazine that introduced them when they just started.
 
Nintendo. They were making video games before Donkey Kong, dating back to the mid 70's iirc. Color TV game, Sherriff, Game and Watch.

The Atari name is still around but I don't know if we can really count them.
 
The Atari today is not the same Atari.

EDIT: Damn stealth edits. I was responding to the now non-existent "Pong" post.
 
Just video games.

Kind of crazy looking at some atari games seeing the Activision logo. It really hasn't changed much.

They have never been sold or bought out either right?

Once in the late eighties I believe, but I don't have any sources for that.

Edit: Found it

"In 1988, Activision began involvement in other types of software besides video games, such as business applications. As a result, Activision changed its corporate name to Mediagenic to have a name that globally represented all its activities. Under the Mediagenic holding company, Activision continued to publish video games for various platforms notably the Nintendo Entertainment System, the Sega Master System, the Atari 7800, Atari ST, Commodore 64 and Amiga.

Following a multi-million judgment on damages in a patent infringement suit, wherein infringement had been determined many years prior during the Levy era, a financially weakened Mediagenic was taken over by an investor group led by Robert (Bobby) Kotick. After taking over the company, the new management filed for a Chapter 11 reorganization."
 
Sega is pretty damn old because they were developing pinball and simplistic electric board games in the 1960s, though I'm sure their development arms have changed pretty often. Sega came out with "Periscope" the arcade game back in 1968.

http://segaretro.org/Periscope

Trip Hawkins has also been in the industry since nearly the dawn of it, but has never been a developer... Producer, strategy, and then board member.
 
For fun someone should find the original 'mission statements' of Activision and EA and post them here so we can read them and laugh (despair) at how much their core values have changed over the decades.
 
Sega is pretty damn old because they were developing pinball and simplistic electric board games in the 1960s, though I'm sure their development arms have changed pretty often. Sega came out with "Periscope" the arcade game back in the 1960s..

http://segaretro.org/Periscope

They were developing pinball games and slot machines in the 40s. Their name is a reference to their start as making games for troops overseas in japan - SErvice GAmes.
 
Top Bottom