The visual creators of retro gaming's iconic look
Yoji Shinkawa defined the visual identity of the Metal Gear Solid series with his ink-brushed character and mech designs, bringing a fusion of manga expressionism and military realism to one of gaming's most acclaimed franchises.
Before becoming Nintendo's legendary game designer, Shigeru Miyamoto designed the original Donkey Kong sprites and cabinet art, establishing the visual vocabulary of the company's most enduring character franchises.
Yoshitaka Amano's ethereal watercolour and ink character designs for the Final Fantasy series established the visual identity of the most successful JRPG franchise in history and brought fine art credentials to game illustration.
Akira Toriyama's manga-inflected character designs for the Dragon Quest series gave the franchise its warm, instantly recognisable visual identity, and his work on Chrono Trigger remains the most celebrated collaboration between a manga artist and a game development team.
Naoto Ohshima designed Sonic the Hedgehog's original character, combining attitude, speed, and visual clarity into a mascot that defined Sega's identity through the 16-bit era and challenged Mario for cultural dominance.
Ken Sugimori designed the original 151 Pokémon and established the franchise's distinctive clean-line illustration style, creating creature designs that have been reproduced on trading cards, merchandise, and games in their hundreds of billions.
Yasushi Suzuki was the lead artist at Treasure whose pixel art work on Gunstar Heroes and Alien Soldier pushed the Sega Genesis's graphical capabilities to their absolute limit, producing animation fluidity and sprite detail that contemporary players assumed required more powerful hardware.
Susan Lee Merritt was one of the earliest professional female artists in the game industry, producing box art and visual materials for Atari during the 2600 era when the gap between hardware capability and artistic imagination was at its widest.
Paul Reiche III created Star Control's alien races and their distinctive visual personalities, designing one of the most celebrated science fiction universes in PC gaming through a combination of illustration skill and comedic world-building.
Peter Andrew Jones painted the iconic box art for elite British games of the 1980s, most famously Elite's cover, bringing the conventions of science fiction paperback art to a generation of home computer games.
Eiji Aonuma shaped the visual and design language of The Legend of Zelda series from Ocarina of Time onward, establishing the tonal and aesthetic evolution of one of Nintendo's most beloved franchises across three decades.
Hiroshi Iuchi directed and provided art direction for Treasure's Radiant Silvergun and Ikaruga, producing the most visually and mechanically sophisticated shoot-'em-ups ever made and establishing a benchmark for the genre's artistic ambition.