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Tech

Bristol company sees sales surge past £1.5m in Japan with Kenshi video game

The success has had a "ripple effect" and the company is also seeing growing demand from South Korea and China

Kenshi by Lo-Fi Games(Image: Lo-Fi Games)

A Bristol video game company has recorded sales of more than £1.5m in Japan just two years after officially releasing its flagship game.

Chris Hunt, founder of Lo-Fi Games, spent more than a decade single-handedly crafting the complex, post-apocalyptic landscape of Kenshi while working night shifts as a security guard.

An early version was released in 2012, with Chris bringing his sister Natalie on board as director soon afterwards.

As an active community of fans steadily emerged, there was growing interest from Japan - the third-largest gaming market in the world, worth £14.4bn.

Lo-Fi Games secured a bursary from the Department for International Trade (DIT) and exhibited at the Tokyo Game Show before formally releasing Kenshi in 2018. The game has now had 89,000 downloads.

Natalie said the game's success in Japan has had a "ripple effect" and the company is seeing growing demand from South Korea and China.

Chris Hunt (right), founder of Lo-Fi Games, and director Natalie(Image: Publicity picture)

She said: "We had previously underestimated how huge the Chinese market would be but since we released a localised version of Kenshi a year ago, it has become our second top-selling country, with sales exceeding £1m.

“We have always strived to create a game that we are passionate about, free from the pressures of investors.