# Spiderling Studios

> video game developer

**Wikidata**: [Q24080237](https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q24080237)  
**Source**: https://4ort.xyz/entity/spiderling-studios

## Summary
Spiderling Studios is a video game developer that operates within the video game industry. It is recorded in multiple digital game-company databases and has a Wikidata entry describing it as a video game developer.

## Key Facts
- Spiderling Studios is classified as a video game developer (instance_of: video game developer).
- Industry: video game industry.
- Wikidata description: "video game developer."
- Gematsu company ID: 717091.
- VideoGameGeek company ID: 30902 (database reference entry recorded 2022-03-19).
- Wikidata sitelink_count: 1.
- Wikipedia language presence recorded: br (Breton).

## FAQs
### Q: What is Spiderling Studios?
A: Spiderling Studios is a company classified as a video game developer working in the video game industry. It is listed in public game-company databases and has a Wikidata entry.

### Q: Where can I find official database references for Spiderling Studios?
A: Spiderling Studios appears in multiple databases: Gematsu (company ID 717091) and VideoGameGeek (company ID 30902, reference dated 2022-03-19). It also has a Wikidata entry with a sitelink count of 1.

### Q: Does Spiderling Studios have a Wikipedia article?
A: A Wikipedia presence is recorded for the Breton language (language code "br"). Wikidata lists a sitelink_count of 1.

### Q: What industry does Spiderling Studios operate in?
A: Spiderling Studios operates in the video game industry as a developer of video games.

## Why It Matters
Spiderling Studios matters as an identified participant in the video game industry. As a video game developer, the studio is part of the ecosystem that designs, programs, and brings interactive entertainment to players. Its presence in recognized industry databases (Gematsu and VideoGameGeek) and in Wikidata provides verifiable points of reference for researchers, journalists, and players seeking authoritative metadata about game companies. The recorded identifiers enable tracking of the studio across platforms, linking it to published titles, credits, and industry reporting where available. Even with limited public-language Wikipedia coverage, the studio's database entries help maintain discoverability and support integration into game catalogs, bibliographies, and metadata-driven services used by consumers and professionals in the field.

## Notable For
- Being explicitly classified on Wikidata as a video game developer.
- Registration in industry and community databases: Gematsu (ID 717091) and VideoGameGeek (ID 30902).
- Recorded Wikipedia language presence in Breton (br).
- Structured metadata availability (Wikidata sitelink_count = 1) that aids discoverability.

## Body
### Overview
- Entity name: Spiderling Studios.
- Primary classification: video game developer.
- Industry sector: video game industry.
- Wikidata description: "video game developer."

### Identifiers & Database Records
- Gematsu company identifier: 717091.
- VideoGameGeek company identifier: 30902.
  - Database reference for VideoGameGeek entry recorded on 2022-03-19.
  - Reference metadata includes an attribution record (P248: Q74864565) and a recorded retrieval/provenance date (P813: 2022-03-19) associated with the VGG company ID (P10511: 30902).

### Wikimedia Presence
- Wikidata: has an entry describing the entity as a video game developer.
- Wikidata sitelink_count: 1.
- Wikipedia language presence recorded: Breton (language code "br").

### Classification Details
- Instance_of: video game developer (a software development organization specializing in the creation of video games).
- Industry tag: video game industry (the sector in which the studio operates).

### Metadata Use Cases
- The Gematsu and VideoGameGeek IDs provide authoritative anchors for cross-referencing Spiderling Studios in games databases, credits lists, and media coverage.
- Wikidata entries and sitelink counts support automated discovery and inclusion in knowledge graphs and catalogues that rely on linked-data identifiers.

## References

1. VideoGameGeek