Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Hidetaka Suehiro

Japanese video game creator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hidetaka Suehiro
Remove ads

Hidetaka Suehiro (末弘 秀孝, Suehiro Hidetaka; born 14 April 1973), known as SWERY or Swery65, is a Japanese video game director and writer. He was one of the founding members of the game development studio Access Games which is based in Osaka. His roles in the company included director, designer, and writer. He is the director of the games Spy Fiction, Deadly Premonition and D4: Dark Dreams Don't Die. He then left the company in 2016, and he founded his own studio, named White Owls Inc.

Quick Facts Born, Other names ...
Remove ads

Early and personal life

Buddhism

Born from Buddhist monks, Swery lived in a temple in his childhood.[4] He first got his monk license in high school,[5] but only became a certified Buddhist monk in 2016 within Jōdo Shinshū Buddhism.[6]

Film

Suehiro received a degree in film and video advertising at Osaka University of Arts.[7] He decided against pursuing in the film industry, as he felt it was "very conservative".[8]

Illness

In November 2015, he announced that he would be taking a health-related break from game development in order to focus on recovering from reactive hypoglycemia.[9] [10]

Drinking

Swery is often called the DrinKING, posting numerous photos of him with alcolohic beverages,[11] but is recently on a sobriety streak.

Sharapova

Sharapova is the self-described "partner" to Swery, bringing him everywhere in his travels.[12]

He has a yakuza-styled back tattoo with his name and Sharapova at the center.[13]

Remove ads

Career

Summarize
Perspective

Swery decided to join the game industry after graduation and worked at various game companies including SNK. In January 2002 he was one of the founding members of Access Games.[7]

The first game he directed was the PlayStation 2 game Spy Fiction released in 2003.[7] The game is a third-person military themed stealth game and the target audience was Western players rather than Japanese players.[7]

Production began in 2004 on a game titled Rainy Woods, which was then cancelled in 2007. Work was restarted under the new title Deadly Premonition and it was released in 2010. A survival horror game, it also placed emphasis on targeting Western gamers rather than Japanese players.[7] That game made its way to the 2012 Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition with the title "Most Critically Polarizing Survival Horror Game" because reviews of the game ranged so heavily.[14] [15]

In 2014, he partnered with Microsoft to develop an Xbox One game titled D4: Dark Dreams Don't Die, which utilizes the Kinect motion-sensing device. The game was highlighted at GDC Next 2013 as one of their "GDC Next 10",[16] where chosen developers give talks on the inspiration behind their upcoming games.

In 2015, he gave a lecture in Osaka and at GDC 2015 regarding physical input in video games and the Kinect device. He also opened a booth along with Access Games at Penny Arcade Expo East 2015.

On 31 October 2016, he announced his departure from Access Games.[17] A new video game studio was later founded by Suehiro on 1 November 2016 as White Owls Inc. White Owls was formally revealed to the public on 15 January 2017.[18]

Suehiro is a good friend of fellow game creator Goichi Suda. Appearing on a livestream in 2019, the pair revealed they worked on a cancelled PlayStation VR game together, after which they decided to collaborate on a horror title. Just before the stream, Suda titled it Hotel Barcelona, and both envisioned a "light and easy to play" game for mobile platforms or Nintendo Switch.[19] In 2023, it has resurfaced as a slasher film parody action game for consoles and PC.[20]

Remove ads

Works

More information Year, Title ...

Other

He is a friend of wrestler Kenny Omega.[27]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads