Aya Kyogoku Explained

Aya Kyogoku
Native Name:京極あや
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:1981 or 1982
Birth Place:Osaka, Japan
Notable Works:Animal Crossing
Occupation:Video game director and producer
Manager of Nintendo EPD Production Group No. 5 (2019–present)

is a Japanese video game director and producer. She is the current manager of Nintendo's Entertainment Planning & Development (EPD) Production Group No. 5, which oversees the Animal Crossing, Splatoon, and Wii Sports franchises. Kyogoku is best known for her work on Animal Crossing, where she has alternately served as a producer, director, and supervisor since 2008.

Career

Kyogoku began her career in 2000 at the video game company Atlus before joining Nintendo in September 2003. While at Atlus, she served as an Assistant Planner for the Dreamcast title deSPIRIA and Assistant Director for the PlayStation 2 title before moving to Nintendo.[1] [2] At Nintendo, Kyogoku worked as a scriptwriter on and , work for which she won a Game Developers Choice Award.[3]

In 2008, she worked as a sequence director on , where she was responsible for script writing and all elements relating to non-player character behavior and dialogue. Kyogoku and Isao Moro jointly served as directors of , the 2012 sequel to City Folk. Following the mixed critical and commercial performance of City Folk, Kyogoku sought to "get back to the series' roots" in New Leaf. In 2015, Kyogoku produced the Animal Crossing spin-off title Happy Home Designer.[4] In 2019, she was named as Manager of Nintendo Entertainment Planning & Development (EPD) Production Group No. 5, a position previously held by Hisashi Nogami before he was promoted at Deputy General Manager of Nintendo EPD.[5] She directed , the fifth main series title in the Animal Crossing series, in 2020. Following the extensive critical and commercial success of New Horizons, Kyogoku has received media attention from both video-game and non-video-game media outlets alike, being dubbed “Nintendo’s Rising Star and Secret Weapon.”[6] [7] [8]

Serving as the director of Animal Crossing: New Leaf, Kyogoku became the first woman to direct a video game at Nintendo Entertainment Analysis & Development (EAD). After noting that she was frequently the only woman on development teams, Kyogoku and New Leaf producer Katsuya Eguchi hired a team that was half female; Kyogoku also encouraged all individuals on the development team to contribute ideas for the game, regardless of their role on the project.[9] Kyogoku credits the diversity of the team for New Leaf's critical and commercial success, stating that "when you are trying to create something that will appeal to many types of people, I have experienced how beneficial it is to have diversity on your team" and “it is very exciting to be able to have different types of people on the development team.” When asked for a message to women who would like to work in the game industry during a Nintendo Developer Chat, Kyogoku responded, “if you want to, please join! I’ll be so happy if we can work together.”

Furthermore, Kyogoku has been praised for broadening the series' appeal "beyond the typical teenage-male demographic.” Notably, Animal Crossing: New Horizons expanded visibility and representation through increased character customization options, including skin tone options and gender-neutral hairstyles that the player can switch between freely. Kyogoku explained that these options are "not just about gender," but rather the sentiment that "society is shifting to valuing a lot of people's different identities." She explained further that “we basically wanted to create a game where users didn't really have to think about gender or if they wanted to think about gender, they're also able to."

Works

YearGame Credit(s)
2000 Assistant planner
2001 Assistant director
2004Scriptwriter
2006
2008Sequence director
2012Director
2013Animal Crossing Plaza Producer[10]
2015
Director
2016Producer
2017 Supervisor[11]
2020Director

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: deSPIRIA – Credits. 12 February 2020. GameFAQs.
  2. Web site: Wizardry: Tale of the Forsaken Land – Credits. 12 February 2020. GameFAQs.
  3. Web site: Aya Kyogoku. 2021-03-16. IMDb.
  4. Web site: 20 September 2015. Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer devs – spin-off origins, decision to focus on house creation, more. 12 February 2020. Nintendo Everything.
  5. Web site: 14 June 2019. Nintendo promotes Aya Kyogoku, Hisashi Nogami, Eiji Aonuma, and Yoshihito Ikebata. 12 February 2020. Nintendo Everything.
  6. News: 2020-12-03. Aya Kyogoku and Hisashi Nogami, the Humans Behind Animal Crossing. en. Bloomberg.com. 2021-03-16.
  7. News: Favis. Elise. Nintendo explains philosophy behind Animal Crossing's big changes, such as gender expression and terraforming. en-US. Washington Post. 2021-03-16. 0190-8286.
  8. Web site: 2016-03-29. Aya Kyogoku: Nintendo's Rising Star and Secret Weapon. 2021-03-16. Goomba Stomp. en-US.
  9. Nintendo's New Key to Creativity: More Women. en-us. Wired. 2021-03-16. 1059-1028.
  10. Web site: Doolan. Liam. 8 December 2014. Animal Crossing Plaza Service Stops At the End of This Month. 1 February 2020. Nintendo Life. Gamer Network.
  11. Web site: Weber. Rachel. 20 December 2017. Nintendo explains how it added microtransactions to Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp without pissing me off. 12 February 2020. GamesRadar.