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47-Tek (Company)
Defunct Californian developers known for their less-than-stellar attempts at sci-fi DOS fighters.
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Steve Aoki (Professional)
American DJ, son of wrestler and Benihana founder Hiroaki "Rocky" Aoki and half-brother of actress Devon Aoki (Kasumi in the Dead or Alive movie). Not Justin Whang.
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Archer Maclean (Professional)
British programmer best known for his pool and puzzle games (some of which bear his name in the title), but nevertheless made strong contributions to early fighting games.
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DreamGear (Company)
Producers of many of those random handhelds and accessories found in actual retail stores. A lot of the games on their output are actually bootleg/hacked/ripoffs but they do also license content from bigger companies like Bandai Namco, Konami, and G-Mode/Data East.
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McLeod Gaming (Company)
Creators of the Super Smash Flash games and their own indie crossover platform fighter, Fraymakers.
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Sunrise (Company)
Anime studio most famous for stuff like Gundam and Cowboy Bebop; now a wholly owned subsidiary of Bandai Namco.
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Spiritonin Media Games (Company)
Former studio lead by game developer Scott Stoddard, specialized in now-deprecated Flash games. Best known for making the first entry of the memetic Robot Unicorn Attack series.
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Opus (Company)
Developer mainly of UFC titles, but also did more conventional fighting games. Had a close relationship with Anchor Inc., co-developing the first "Fighters Destiny" and UFC titles.
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