BMB (possibly pronounced as "VMV" since these are Cyrillic letters) is the only known alias of a developer closely related to KDS (Kudos), the publisher who distributed most of their games on Mega Drive on the Russian-speaking market. Typically, they go uncredited in their games, but there are enough similarities between their games to be identifiable as a single developer.
If you are browsing PlayPile looking for information on BMB, here is what the data shows about this company. They have 14 titles listed on our site, with credits showing them as a developer on all of those and a publisher on nine of them. Their work spans from 2011 to 2023, but the output is heavily skewed toward one specific era. The company released 11 games during the 2010s and only one game in the 2020s. BMB focuses almost entirely on the Sega Mega Drive or Genesis platform with 13 of their 14 games built for that system. They have a single PC title to their name. Their genre portfolio is dominated by platformers, which make up 10 of their releases. The rest includes three puzzle games, two adventure titles, and one each of hack and slash or beat em up, strategy, and indie genres. This distribution suggests a narrow scope rather than a broad variety of experiences. Their release history shows a specific pattern in recent years. They published Luckie Ball in April 2023, but their previous listed releases cluster around the end of 2014 and early 2013. Titles like Angry Birds: Star Wars, LEGO Batman, Iron Man, and Priklyucheniya Mishek Gammi all dropped between December 2013 and December 2014. This indicates a period of high activity that ended abruptly before the recent 2023 entry. The background provided by IGDB notes that BMB might be pronounced as "VMV" since these are Cyrillic letters. They appear to be an alias for a developer closely tied to KDS, a publisher who handled distribution for their games on Mega Drive within the Russian-speaking market. Most of these works go uncredited, yet similarities between the projects allow them to be identified as coming from a single source. The available data does not provide rating scores or player feedback for these titles, so we cannot determine if the quality is generally great, mixed, or poor based on this text alone. You will find that their presence in the industry is defined by a concentrated run of Mega Drive games during the 2010s rather than a long-term career across multiple decades and platforms.













