Cavia (company)

Cavia Inc. (Japanese: 株式会社キャビア, Hepburn: Kabushiki gaisha Kyabia) was a Japanese video game developer. The company name was apparently an acronym for Computer Amusement Visualizer, although the company's web site also claimed it referred to caviar.

Cavia Inc.
Native name
株式会社キャビア
Kabushiki gaisha Kyabia
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
FoundedMarch 1, 2000; 24 years ago (2000-03-01)
DefunctJuly 12, 2010; 13 years ago (2010-07-12)
FateMerged into AQ Interactive
HeadquartersTokyo, Japan
Key people
Chikara Uchino (President & COO), Yoko Taro
ProductsDrakengard, Nier
ParentAQ Interactive
Websitecavia.com (archived)

The company was founded on March 1, 2000, and headquartered in Tokyo. Its shareholders included Amuse Capital, Tokuma Shoten, Tohokushinsha Film Corporation, Nippon Television Network Corporation, Tokyo FM Broadcasting, Mitsubishi Corporation, and Hayao Nakayama.

Cavia was best known for the Drakengard series, the first title in the Nier series (a spin-off of the former) and two Resident Evil rail shooters: The Umbrella Chronicles and The Darkside Chronicles.

In October 2005, the company was sold to AQ Interactive, who became a holding company responsible for the management of subsidiary companies as well as sales and promotion of game software. The old company's game planning & development business was transferred to a newly established Cavia Inc.

In July 2010, the company was officially disbanded and absorbed into AQ Interactive. Nier, released in May 2010, was the studio's last game.[1] Despite the closure, some members of the development staff from Nier, including director Yoko Taro, went on to produce a sequel to the Drakengard series, Drakengard 3, under Access Games and published by Square Enix.

Former members of Cavia have either gone freelance, or joined other development teams within Marvelous AQL (created from the merger of AQ Interactive), Comcept, Tango Gameworks, FromSoftware or rejoined the teams at Namco where members of Cavia were from originally. Former member Yoichi Take (also previously of Namco) left on December 1, 2006 to start his own development studio, Toylogic.


Games

YearTitlePlatform
2000Dog of Bay[2]PlayStation 2
2002Nihon Daihyo-senshu Ni NaroPlayStation 2
One Piece: Nanatsu Shima no DaihihōGame Boy Advance
2003Resident Evil: Dead AimPlayStation 2
Drakengard
Takahashi Naoko no Marathon Shiyouyo!
Kamen Rider Seigi no Keifu
2004Soccer Life!
Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic WarriorsGame Boy Advance
2005SteamboyPlayStation 2
Soccer Life 2
Drakengard 2
Naruto: Uzumaki Chronicles
Beat Down: Fists of VengeancePlayStation 2, Xbox
Dragon Ball Z: Supersonic Warriors 2Nintendo DS
Tetris: The Grand Master AceXbox 360
2006Tsuushin Taisen Majyan: Toryumon
Zitsuroku Oniyomenikki: Shiuchi Ni Taeru Otto No Rifuzintaiken AdventurePlayStation Portable
Dragon Quest: Shōnen Yangus to Fushigi no DungeonPlayStation 2
WinBack 2: Project PoseidonPlayStation 2, Xbox
Lovely Complex: Punch de ContePlayStation 2
Bullet WitchXbox 360
Zegapain XOR
Naruto: Uzumaki Chronicles 2PlayStation 2
Zegapain NOTXbox 360
Death Note: Kira GameNintendo DS
2007Victorious Boxers: RevolutionWii
Fate/Tiger ColosseumPlayStation Portable
Resident Evil: The Umbrella ChroniclesWii
2008Fate/unlimited codesArcade, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable
Sega Bass FishingWii
KORG DS-10Nintendo DS
2009Suzumiya Haruhi no Heiretsu[3]Wii
Suzumiya Haruhi no Chokuretsu[4]Nintendo DS
KORG DS-10 plusNintendo DS, Nintendo DSi
Resident Evil: The Darkside ChroniclesWii
2010Nier GestaltPlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Nier ReplicantPlayStation 3
CancelledCry OnXbox 360
Catacombs[5]PlayStation 3, Xbox 360

References

External links