Naughty Dog

Naughty Dog

Creates exclusive, story-driven video games for PlayStation

Overview

Naughty Dog is a video game developer known for creating story-driven, high-quality games that are exclusive to PlayStation. Its products are AAA console games built around cinematic narratives, memorable characters, and detailed worlds, released as physical and digital titles with additional DLCs and remasters. The company collaborates on related media projects, such as a TV series adaptation of The Last of Us with HBO, to extend its franchises beyond games. What sets Naughty Dog apart is its track record of iconic franchises (like Crash Bandicoot, Jak and Daxter, Uncharted, and The Last of Us), multiple Game of the Year awards, and a strong emphasis on emotional engagement and character development, all while staying tightly integrated with PlayStation hardware and ecosystems. The goal is to maintain leadership in story-driven gaming, grow a loyal fan base, support the PlayStation platform, and expand its franchises into other media to reach broader audiences.

Significant Headcount Growth

About Naughty Dog

Simplify's Rating
Why Naughty Dog is rated
B-
Rated B on Competitive Edge
Rated B on Growth Potential
Rated C on Differentiation

Industries

Consumer Software

Entertainment

Gaming

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Acquired

Total Funding

N/A

Headquarters

Santa Monica, California

Founded

1984

People at Naughty Dog

People at Naughty Dog who can refer or advise you

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Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • PlayStation still backs Naughty Dog as a flagship first-party developer.
  • Nostalgia campaigns for Uncharted show enduring fan engagement and monetization potential.
  • A second unannounced project suggests capacity for a broader long-term pipeline.

What critics are saying

  • Sony reportedly dislikes Naughty Dog's slow PS5-era release cadence.
  • Intergalactic lacks a confirmed release date and risks missing the PS5 generation.
  • Heavy reliance on remasters and remakes weakens new-content momentum and fan trust.

What makes Naughty Dog unique

  • PlayStation-owned studio behind Crash Bandicoot, Uncharted, and The Last of Us.
  • Renowned for cinematic, story-driven exclusives with high critical acclaim.
  • Announced Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet as a new franchise in 2024.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Paid Vacation

Wellness Program

Remote Work Options

Hybrid Work Options

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

18%

1 year growth

18%

2 year growth

17%
PS5 Home
Jun 2nd, 2026
PlayStation's declining first-party game sales Shows that its live service gamble hasn't paid off.

PlayStation's declining first-party game sales Shows that its live service gamble hasn't paid off. Last updated: 2026/06/02 at 5:09 PM During the PS4 generation, PlayStation knocked it out of the park with its first-party lineup. It released hit after single-player hit, ranging from smaller titles like Concrete Genie and Tearaway Unfolded to juggernauts like the God of War 2018 reboot. PlayStation frankly left Xbox in the dust when it came to first-party releases, and with Nintendo focusing on the ill-fated Wii U for half of the 8th console gen, it's easy to argue that Sony's console brand triumphed over all throughout this era. PlayStation's single-player games were very successful on the PS4; so successful, in fact, that it started to make less of them for the PS5. Indeed, rather than double down on what made it so lucrative, PlayStation decided to do what virtually every publisher its size has done at some point: focus on live service games. Under former CEO Jim Ryan's reign, PlayStation did everything it possibly could to make its own Fortnite. In 2022, the company projected that it would release a whopping 12 live service games by the end of 2025. That year has come and gone, however, and most of these games are nowhere to be found. Most of PlayStation's live service games have been failures. It would be disingenuous of me to claim that PlayStation hasn't launched any good live service games this generation, but the few that it did release have mostly been failures. Sure, while the company does have its Helldivers 2s and MLB The Shows, it has almost nothing else aside from that. Destruction All-Stars was the first live service title that PlayStation released as part of its live service pivot, and it launched to nothing but a resounding groan. The game initially debuted on PS5 as a pay-to-play title, but it sold so poorly that PlayStation decided to add it to its PS Plus subscription service. Even then, it wasn't able to attract many fans. As for its other live service titles... well, they kind of don't exist. Concord, the multiplayer FPS that looked like a weird cross between Overwatch and Guardians of the Galaxy, infamously got shut down just a few weeks after its release. Likewise, the PSVR2-exclusive Firewall Ultra debuted in 2023 with virtually no marketing, and it was delisted from the PlayStation storefront earlier this year. Many of the other live service titles that PlayStation claimed to be working on have just been outright canceled: Naughty Dog, PlayStation's premier single-player studio, was working on an online game set in the Last of Us universe. Insomniac, too, was making a multiplayer game as part of its Spider-Man saga. Even Bend Studio, the creators of Days Gone, were reportedly working on a live service title of some kind. None of these games, however, have ever seen the light of day. And with upcoming PlayStation title Fairgames also reportedly undergoing development woes, it seems that this whole experiment from Sony has been nothing but a resounding failure. Recent data collected by industry insider Stephen Totilo suggests that there is indeed information to back this up. PlayStation's first-party games have been experiencing a decline in sales. In a paywalled report published by Totilo on his website, the insider revealed that PlayStation's first-party game sales have gradually declined in the last few fiscal years. Though the company experienced a peak in software sales during fiscal year 2020 (coincidentally, the start of the COVID-19 pandemic), it has largely been on a downward trend ever since... with one notable exception, fiscal year 2025. This year, it's worth noting, is the same year that Ghost of Yotei released. Ghost of Yotei seems, by all accounts and purposes, to have been a massive success for PlayStation. Reports suggest that the game has been outpacing Ghost of Tsushima in sales, despite launching on a console with a far smaller install base. Looking at the game, it's easy to see why it's been so popular. Ghost of Yotei is exactly the type of title that diehard fans have wanted from PlayStation: blockbuster single-player games. While Sony's live service efforts have languished during this console generation, its single-player titles have largely been resounding hits. God of War: Ragnarok and Horizon: Forbidden West were critical and commercial successes, and Astro Bot managed to win Game of the Year while also selling more than a million copies. PlayStation's focus on live service has harmed its single-player efforts. I'd wager that the reason why PlayStation's first-party game sales have been declining in recent years has nothing to do with the quality of its single-player titles or their commercial performance. Rather, the company simply hasn't released enough of them, thanks in part to its failed efforts to chase the cash cow that is live service. Compared to the PS4 generation, PlayStation's first-party lineup during the PS5 era has been relatively slim. The firm has been able to make do by signing various exclusivity deals with third-party companies, but its own studios have had little to offer, due to this live service initiative. Admittedly, there are many potential reasons that one can argue have contributed to PlayStation's drop in sales, but the lack of single-player games and, in turn, the firm's live service efforts, seem to be the ones that makes the most sense. PlayStation has spent several years developing multiplayer games that will never come out. It's a shame, then, that all this money it wasted didn't go to funding the development of single-player titles instead.

Twisted Voxel
Apr 11th, 2026
Insider claims Naughty Dog is developing new Uncharted game alongside Intergalactic.

Insider claims Naughty Dog is developing new Uncharted game alongside Intergalactic. A new claim from an industry insider suggests that Naughty Dog may be developing a new entry in the Uncharted series alongside its already announced project, Intergalactic The Heretic Prophet. The information comes from Alir, who previously shared details related to a State of Play announcement. Responding to a user who said, "Naughty Dog has been developing a second single player game alongside Intergalactic for a few years now." When asked whether the project could be tied to the Uncharted franchise, the insider responded, "Yes, it's indeed an Uncharted game." This aligns with earlier reports pointing to a second ongoing project at the studio. Naughty Dog has already acknowledged that it is working on another title in addition to Intergalactic. In March 2025, insider DanielRPK stated that the unannounced project was not The Last of Us III and was instead being directed by Shaun Escayg, known for his work on Uncharted: The Lost Legacy and Marvel's Avengers. "Naughty Dog has a second project (not The Last of Us III), directed by Shaun Escayg (Uncharted: The Lost Legacy, Avengers)," he said, adding, "It's been in development for three years now." Further speculation has been fueled by Escayg's recent social media activity, where he shared a post captioned "Research..." alongside an image from Fort George in Trinidad and Tobago. The location has drawn attention due to its historical ties to maritime conflicts and lost treasure, elements that closely align with the themes traditionally explored in the Uncharted series. Trinidad and Tobago has long been associated with stories of sunken ships, pirate legends, and lost cargo from the colonial era, making it a plausible setting for a new installment. Meanwhile, narrative threads from Uncharted 4: A Thief's End, including the introduction of Nathan Drake's daughter Cassie, have previously been seen as a possible direction for the series moving forward. Naughty Dog has not issued any official statement regarding a new Uncharted title. The studio's currently announced project, Intergalactic The Heretic Prophet, also remains without a confirmed release date.

Instant Gaming
Apr 6th, 2026
Naughty Dog reportedly planned Uncharted 5 before COVID-19.

Naughty Dog reportedly planned Uncharted 5 before COVID-19. April 6, 2026 1:42 PM, by Thibaut Instant Gaming haven't got a new Uncharted game since August 2017. In fact, Uncharted: The Lost Legacy is the most recent title. The fourth installment will celebrate its tenth anniversary next month. According to journalist Tom Henderson of Insider Gaming, Naughty Dog had reportedly planned to develop Uncharted 5 before the COVID-19 pandemic. Unfortunately, Instant Gaming don't know if such a project is still in the works. It's worth noting that Naughty Dog was working on The Last of Us Online before its cancellation in December 2023. The American studio is now focused on Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet, which could arrive in 2027.

GamesNu
Mar 30th, 2026
The Last of Us boss says there are A "few stops that remain on the road ahead"

The Last of Us boss says there are A "few stops that remain on the road ahead" Neil Druckmann, the Naughty Dog veteran best known for his work on the Uncharted and The Last of Us franchises, has teased that there might be more The Last of Us to come. In a post on Instagram, Druckmann said he came across his original sketches from 2003 for the game that would become The Last of Us, and remarked that it's been a "wild journey." Then he went on to tease that he might not be finished with the series. "Grateful for every part of it, especially the few stops that remain on the road ahead," he said. Mar 31, 2026 Druckmann could be referring to HBO's The Last of Us series, which is coming back in 2027 for its third and potentially final season. He's not involved with Season 3, however. He might also be referring to a new entry in The Last of Us game series. After all, Druckmann has heavily teased that a third game might be on the way. GamesNu also know that Naughty Dog has had at least two games in development since 2023, one of which is Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet-the other is a mystery. Naughty Dog was working on a live-service The Last of Us game called The Last of Us Online, and the studio said it was the team's most ambitious game ever. It was canceled in 2023. Druckmann said he left HBO's The Last of Us ahead of its third season so he could focus on "all the various Last of Us things I'm working on" beyond the TV series, and many fans took that as a tease for future The Last of Us games. Despite the ambiguity of it, his latest statement certainly won't dispel that speculation.

Instant Gaming
Mar 26th, 2026
Sanzaru Games pitched a Jak and Daxter remake to Sony.

Sanzaru Games pitched a Jak and Daxter remake to Sony. March 26, 2026 2:04 AM, by Thibaut After Crash Bandicoot on the original PlayStation, Naughty Dog developed the Jak and Daxter series for the PS2. Despite its undeniable merits, the platformer franchise hasn't seen a single new installment since 2009's Jak and Daxter: The Lost Frontier. Back in 2012, the original trilogy returned to the PS3 via a remaster, and the PS2 version of the first game was ported to the PS4 in 2017. However, Sony could have offered players a complete overhaul... Travis Howe, who worked at Sanzaru Games from February 2018 until its closure by Meta last January, revealed on LinkedIn that the studio had pitched a "long while back" a remake/remaster of Jak and Daxter to PlayStation. Howe even created a frame-by-frame cutscene to show what the project might have looked like. He notes that this remake had not been commissioned by Sony and that Sanzaru had simply tried to obtain permission to do it. Of course, the remake never saw the light of day. Sanzaru Games was known for developing titles such as Secret Agent Clank, Sly Cooper: Thieves in Time, Sonic Boom on 3DS, and Asgard's Wrath.

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