
Publisher and developer company established in October 1992 in Tokyo, Japan. In many of it's releases different brand names and logos are used instead of HuneX one.
HuneX is a Japanese publisher and developer founded in 1992 that has released 81 titles since 1993. The company operates primarily as a developer with 77 games under its direct creation, while only seven appear where they are listed solely as a publisher. Their catalog spans from the PlayStation era through to modern systems like the Nintendo Switch and Android devices, though the PlayStation 2 remains their most supported platform with 31 releases. The PlayStation Portable follows closely with 23 titles, indicating a heavy focus on Sony handhelds during the mid-2000s and early 2010s. Their output is heavily concentrated in the visual novel genre, which accounts for 45 of their games. Adventure titles make up another 20 entries, followed by simulators and role-playing games at nine and seven respectively. The company produced very little content in the 1990s with only nine games, but saw a massive surge in the 2000s when they released 43 titles. Production slowed significantly in the 2010s to 26 games and has dropped further in the 2020s with just three releases so far. Quality consistency is a notable issue for this developer. Their average rating across rated titles sits at 57.3 out of 100, which suggests an overall mixed reception. The rating distribution shows they have only one title considered great, zero in the good range, one in the mixed category, and one rated as poor. Alia's Carnival! Sacrament stands out as their highest-rated work with a score of 87, but other titles like Office Lovers scored a mediocre 50 and Steam Prison received a low 35. Recent activity includes releases like The Town of Nie Iromusubi in May 2025 and Love Live! Nijigasaki High School Idol Club: Tokimeki Roadmap to the Future in April 2025. They also released Hoshizora Testudou to Shiro no Tabi in 2021 and Ephemeral: Miniature Garden in late 2018. The bio notes that many releases use different brand names or logos instead of the main HuneX name, which complicates tracking their full history under a single identity.















































