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Frima Studio

Frima Studio is a Canadian video game development company founded in 2003 and based in Quebec.

In 2010, Frima was noted as one of the fastest-growing companies in Canada by Profit.

The company was founded in Quebec City in 2003 by Steve Couture, Philippe Bégin, and Christian Daigle amid the dot-com crash. Originally, the name Frima comes from the French word "frimas," which is the layer of frost that forms around windows during winter. This is due to the fact that the studio made its debut in the poorly-insulated apartment that the three founders shared. Frima has notably developed Flash games for many famous intellectual properties, including Harry Potter and Looney Tunes.

In 2008, Frima acquired Humagade, a mobile game developer. Shortly after, the studio was merged with the main Frima office.

In 2009, with the opening of a second studio in Matane, Frima had an estimated 265 full-time employees. Later that year, they became the beneficiary of a $2 million joint investment between the company and the Government of Quebec to fund employee training. This resulted in the creation of 147 new jobs over the next three years, and the maintenance of 201 pre‐existing production‐oriented jobs.

In June 2011, the Matane studio was shut down. Frima cited the difficulty of attracting talent to the area as the primary reason. In August of that year, Frima acquired Volta, an animation, concept art and design studio. The division was sold to Keywords Studios for $5.25 million in 2016. Frima stated the profit would allow them to further focus on internal animation. During Frima's ownership, the two collaborated on several projects, such as the 2015 Bionicle relaunch, where Volta handled the animated television series while Frima developed the mobile video game.

In 2014, the company's Quebec City head office moved to the former television studios of TQS owned-and-operated station CFAP-TV in the Saint-Roch neighborhood. By then, Frima had grown to over 350 employees. In April 2015, the company received a $7.5 million investment from Média-Participations and Fonds de solidarité FTQ. The following November, Frima opened an additional studio in Montreal.

On February 22, 2017, the Montreal studio was shuttered as Frima laid off 60 employees. The company's total headcount was reduced to 250. The following April, Couture stepped down as CEO. Daigle replaced him until Martin Carrier was appointed as CEO and president in August 2017. Daigle would return to the position after Carrier left the company in 2020. In 2024, Frima sold its original gaming properties to Epic Storyworlds, a company run by Couture. Following a project cancellation and a reduction in provincial tax credits, Frima laid off 37 employees in March 2025, dropping to less than 200 in total.

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