Team Asobi

Team Asobi is a Japanese video game developer based in Tokyo. A first-party studio for Sony Interactive Entertainment, Team Asobi was originally formed in 2012 as part of Japan Studio, but formally spun off into an independent studio within Sony's PlayStation Studios in April 2021.[2]

Team Asobi
Company typeDivision
IndustryVideo games
PredecessorJapan Studio
Founded2012; 12 years ago (2012) (as division of Japan Studio)
April 1, 2021; 3 years ago (2021-04-01) (as Team Asobi)
Headquarters,
Japan
Key people
Nicolas Doucet (Studio Director, Creative Director)
Products
Number of employees
60+[1] (2022)
ParentPlayStation Studios
Websiteteamasobi.com

History

Team Asobi was first formed in 2012 as an internal part of Japan Studio based in Tokyo by Nicolas Doucet.[3][4][5] The team's name is derived from the Japanese word "Asobi",[a] meaning "Play".[3] After forming, they worked on technical demos and went on to develop The Playroom (2013), a pre-downloaded augmented reality game designed to demonstrate the use of the PlayStation Camera and DualShock 4 for the PlayStation 4.[4] Doucet and several members of his team had been developers for games for the EyeToy and had brought their knowledge forward for use on The Playroom.[6][7] Team Asobi also created a virtual reality version The Playroom VR to demonstrate the PlayStation VR unit with its release in 2016.[7] The Playroom introduced a small robotic character, then named "A5081" which visually resembles the word "ASOBI",[8] and became the reference for the Astro Bot character used in their later games, Astro Bot Rescue Mission (2018) and Astro's Playroom (2020).[3][9]

Across late 2020 and early 2021, several staff members of Japan Studio, outside those of Team Asobi, announced their departure; Sony later affirmed that by April 2021, Japan Studio would be refocused around Team Asobi based on the success of Astro's Playroom.[10] In June 2021, Sony announced that Team Asobi had been transitioned to a standalone studio within PlayStation Studios.[3][11][2] Doucet remains Asobi's studio director and creative director following this transition.[2]

Games developed

YearTitlePlatform(s)NotesRef(s)
2013The PlayroomPlayStation 4[6]
2016The Playroom VRPlayStation VR required[7]
2018Astro Bot Rescue Mission[3]
2020Astro's PlayroomPlayStation 5Final release as part of Japan Studio[3]

Notes

References

External links