Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio is a video game developer housed within the Japanese video game companySega as part of its Sega CS Research and Development No. 1 division. It is known for developing the Yakuza games since Yakuza 5. Since Yakuza 3, they were referred to as Sega's CS1 team, all the way up to '. It was spun off from Sega CS1 R&D after the development of ' was completed. The very first game to use the studio's original logo was Binary Domain in Japan, released in February 2012. Eventually, the RGG Studio's logo became used consistently and the way they brand themselves and give themselves an identity of their own. According to Masayoshi Yokoyama, one of the leads of the studio, the studio is not a company organization but rather a "concept" or a "production team". Nevertheless, the studio's logo and name have become more recognizable internationally, and the logo has been used consistently.
History
Before Yakuza
Though the RGG Studio logo was only officially established in late August 2011, and first used to promote Binary Domain in Japan back in February 2012, the studio's origins can very much be traced back to the first 2 Super Monkey Ball titles on the GameCube. In 2000, Toshihiro Nagoshi was the president of AV, whose their first title on home consoles was actually a remake of Nagoshi's Daytona USA, as Daytona USA 2001 on the Dreamcast. Nagoshi, who had previously worked under Sega AM2's Yu Suzuki and been credited as the creator of the arcade titles Daytona USA and Virtua Striker, devised the concept of rolling spheres through mazes based on his desire to create a game that was instantly possible to understand and play, as a contrast to increasingly complex games at Japanese arcades at the time. AV developed it initially as an arcade title, Monkey Ball. Monkey Ball was first released in Japanese arcades in June 2001, and then received an upgraded version — Super Monkey Ball — as a GameCube launch title in all regions. After the success of the first Super Monkey Ball, it spawned a direct sequel on the GameCube. Following that, a collaboration with Nintendo happened. AV would develop F-Zero GX, while Nintendo would be responsible for the supervision of their IP. In the end, Nintendo was impressed with the product, considering it a step forward for the F-Zero franchise. After the release of F-Zero GX, the non-sports staff of Smilebit would be merged with Amusement Vision. It is worth mentioning that Smilebit merged into AV, as the latter still got to keep their name. The only two projects were the arcade title, Ollie King in March 2004, and in June 2004 on the Game Boy Advance.
Development of Yakuza and building a franchise
By July 2004, Amusement Vision was dissolved as part of the New Entertainment R&D Dept., and the development of Yakuza started. The first Yakuza game had a difficult development cycle, as the first pitch was rejected by the higher-ups, due to expecting something different out of Nagoshi. At the time, Sega and Sammy merged to form Sega Sammy Holdings. The new owner and CEO of Sega Sammy, Hajime Satomi saw footage of Yakuza that was forcibly sneaked in a preview of upcoming Sega games, in spite of that it wasn't officially a project yet. Satomi took an interrest in it, though the Sega executives were unhappy about this move. Through perseverance however, Nagoshi managed to get the project started. The project was risky with a high budget and many people working on it, and there was no estimate on how the market would accept a game aimed at only adult Japanese males, based in the Japanese underworld. The highest estimate was only 70,000 copies in Japan. However, over time, the game sold over 1 million copies. Nagoshi said that it gave the team confidence to press on and continue to evolve it into a series. The staff from Amusement Vision and Smilebit worked on many different console and arcade games, and they had confidence in their genres and careers. However, Yakuza did not match not any of their past experiences, which Nagoshi saw as them all playing on a level playing field. Every element of the game had to go through Nagoshi first, because only he had a concrete idea of how the game was supposed to end up. When the game grew into a franchise, the staff gained more freedom and independence in regards to which elements to put into the game, due to established rules by Nagoshi. Therefore, the games become more varied as the series went on. The initial target audience was adult Japanese males but overtime, the series audience expanded into females and also overseas players. Nagoshi says that the development team of the Yakuza series always needs to have a sense of challenge. For Yakuza 2, they first thought about having a two-year development cycle, but after discussion, it was thought that releasing and developing the game just one year later would be better to keep audiences attention, though it meant more work for them. For the first spin-off Ryu Ga Gotoku Kenzan, the team initially made fun of their goal of making the game for the new PlayStation 3 while also moving to a different setting. However, they managed to make it in just a year and a bit, and the staff felt refreshed. While certain things have become routine, each game is still hard work for the team, but the fanbase keeps Nagoshi motivated. Nagoshi explains that the fast release schedule of one game per year with a massive amount of content is the team's desire to constantly keep delivering the fans with not only what they want, but also surprising them. One detour for the team was the game Binary Domain, which unlike the Yakuza series, was an attempt to make something for the worldwide audience. However, it was not very successful, and it made the team reflect on preferring to keep making authentic Japanese games rather than pretending to be something else. The new Dragon Engine developed for and used in subsequent games used technology from Binary Domain and was evolved further.
Writing
The main writer behind the stories and scenarios of most of the Yakuza series has been Masayoshi Yokoyama, who previously was a senior planner for Jet Set Radio. When developing the first game, the tagline was "The maddog Yakuza and the 10 billion yen girl" and various members of the team were able to pitch a story. Yokoyama's proposal stood out where instead of focusing on a big plot twist that concerned the girl and the 10 billion yen, he drew up a character correlation chart, and explained how the various characters were related to each other. As a whole, Yokoyama focuses on entertaining characters and scenes, and only decides the culprit at the very end in the writing process, with a focus on who would be the most interesting to fight as a final boss. Yokoyama himself doesn't read novels and has no training in script writing, and is mostly inspired by visual mediums like film and TV shows. For the first two Yakuza games, crime novelist Hase Seishu was an editor of Yokoyama's scripts. He heavily critiqued the first draft, suggesting that it lacks realism, so Yokoyama did further research and adjusted the script in his own way. For the second game, Yokoyama only needed one round of editing from Seishu. Nagoshi is very involved in the creation of the scripts, and advocated for the various elements found in Yakuza 3, such as the more heartwarming atmosphere with the kids at the orphanage, the return of Joji Kazama, as well as suggesting the keywords "base" and "defense" for the story. For Yakuza 2, the golden Osaka Castle, was also Nagoshi's idea.