Sega Mega Drive

From Sega Retro

Megadrive1.jpgMegadrive2.jpg
Sega Mega Drive
Manufacturer: Sega
Variants: Mega Drive 2, Genesis 3, Mega Jet, Nomad, Mega Tech, Mega Play, Amstrad Mega PC
Add-ons: Sega Mega-CD, Sega 32X, Mega Modem, Power Base Converter
Release Date RRP Code

The Sega Mega Drive (メガドライブ), called the Sega Genesis in North America and Super Gam*Boy (수퍼겜보이) (later Super Aladdin Boy (수퍼알라딘 보이) in South Korea, is a cartridge-based video game console developed by Sega in 1988.

The Mega Drive is Sega's third home console, following the SG-1000 (including SG-1000 II) and the Sega Master System (Mark III). It was codenamed the Sega Mark V during development and is part of what is now known as the fourth generation of video game consoles.

The Mega Drive is Sega's most successful video game console, selling over 40 million units worldwide,[1] including more than 20 million in the United States, over 9 million in Western Europe, 3.58 million in Japan, and 3 million in Brazil.[2]

It has a software library consisting of more than one thousand games released for the system in total. As well as competing with Nintendo's Famicom (NES) and later Super Famicom (SNES) for market control, Sega also found itself fighting against NEC's TurboGrafx-16 (PC Engine in Japan), SNK's Neo Geo, the Atari Jaguar and numerous home computers in one of the biggest "console wars" of all time.

It had a cartridge enhancement chip, the Sega Virtua Processor (SVP), and two add-on consoles, the Sega CD and 32X. The Mega Drive would be succeeded by the Sega Saturn (released in 1994), and then the Sega Dreamcast (released in 1998).

Hardware

The Mega Drive was envisioned at the next technological step over other video game consoles available at the time. It is a "16-bit" machine, named after its use of a 16-bit CPU (in this case, the Motorola 68000), and was marketed as being superior to popular "8-bit" consoles dominating the market at the time, usually the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) but sometimes its immediate predecessor, the Sega Master System. 16-bit CPUs had been gaining popularity since the mid-80s, were widely used in arcade machines, and were almost expected to be found in new home computers - it was therefore considered logical that the next "generation" of dedicated video game consoles should follow suit.

The Mega Drive builds on technology found in the Master System (and with adaptors, is fully backwards compatible), though as well as upping the technical specifications for more demanding gameplay, sound and graphics, makes a number of cruicial changes to the design of consoles which continue to this day. Firstly it added a third face button, C, to the (now ergonomically designed) control pad. The Mega Drive outputs sound in stereo, and makes an attempt to region lock games through software. Also, when utilising the right cables, the Mega Drive is natively able to produce a clearer image than its rivals (on top of its already higher resolution 320x240 display).

All Mega Drives ultilise a top-loading design (as opposed to the cumbersome VCR-style cartridge loading of the Western NES), while having removable controllers (unlike the Famicom). It was designed from day one to allow hardware expansions, and its use of dark plastic means that the "yellowing" of older systems (from bromine-based flame retardants reacting with oxygen) is less of an issue.

It was the most powerful console at the time of its release in 1988, surpassing the PC Engine (TurboGrafx-16), and it was not surpassed in power until the Neo Geo in 1990. The Mega Drive is also more powerful than the SNES, released in 1990, whereas the SNES has a larger color palette (see Blast Processing article for detailed technical comparison between the Mega Drive and SNES).

Compared to home computers at the time, it was not as powerful as the Japan-exclusive Sharp X68000 (released 1987) or FM Towns (released 1989). However, the Mega Drive was more powerful than Western home computers in the late '80s, including the Amiga. The Mega Drive's 68000 CPU is clocked at 7.670453 MHz (NTSC) or 7.600489 MHz (PAL), while the Amiga's 68000 CPU is clocked at 7.16 MHz (NTSC) or 7.09 MHz (PAL). The Mega Drive displays eighty 15-color sprites at 32×32 pixels each, while the Amiga displays eight 3-color sprites at 8 pixels wide.[3] The Mega Drive displays 61–64 colors standard and 114–192 colors with Shadow/Highlight, while the Amiga displays 2–32 colors standard and 64 colors with EHB. The Mega Drive's VDP can DMA blit 3.21845–6.4369 MB/s bandwidth (6.4369 MPixels/s fillrate), while the Amiga's Blitter can blit 1.7725–3.58 MB/s (2.363333–4.773333 MPixels/s with 64 colors). During active display, with 64 colors at 60 FPS, the VDP can write 708.406 KB/s to 2.194021 MB/s (1.416812–2.194021 MPixels/s) during 320×224 display, while the Blitter can write 332.5–700 KB/s (443,333–933,333 pixels/s) during 320×200 display.[4] The Mega Drive supports tilemap backgrounds, reducing processing, memory and bandwidth requirements by up to 64 times compared to the Amiga's bitmap backgrounds,[5] giving the Mega Drive an effective tile fillrate of 6.934358–36.325644 MPixels/s (see Blast Processing below). The Mega Drive has a Z80 sound CPU and supports 10 audio channels, while the Amiga lacks a sound CPU and supports 4 audio channels.[3]

Models

Main article: Mega Drive consoles.

Mega Drive

The original Mega Drive measures 28 cm×21.2 cm×7 cm. The top of the unit is split into two components: a circular emboss with the cartridge slot and a tagline (which was omitted on later versions), and a control panel containing the power and reset buttons and the volume slider for the headphones jack. Audio output through the original model was mono through the A/V port, while the headphone jack was used for stereo sound. A third DE-9 port on the back of the unit provided additional peripheral support, though was removed from later revisions.

Asian, Japanese and South Korean models have a cartridge locking mechanism which prevents cartridges from being removed when the power is on (which is why "Eastern" cartridges, as well as the Sonic & Knuckles cartridge and various others, have a cut-out on their left sides). Later runs included the TradeMark Security System, missing in early builds causing small compatibility issues, despite the feature having been planned early on.

Mega Drive 2

1993 saw this cost-reduced redesign (known as the Mega Drive II in Europe, and not explicitly referred to as anything other than "Genesis" in North America), at 22 cm×21.2 cm×5.9 cm, being introduced internationally. One of the major revisions from the original model was the removal of the headphones jack in favor of stereo output through a redesigned 9-pin A/V port. American and European models used a momentary switch for power while non-western models used a left-right switch. Furthermore, the audio mixing circuitry was modified, resulting in noticeably different quality audio output — here is a page with audio samples, provided by little-scale.

A common myth is that the Mega Drive 2 lacks a Z80 — the truth is that it lacks a Zilog Z80. During the Mega Drive's lifetime, Sega received various off-the-shelf chips from different manufacturers, and sometimes would rebrand chips as their own or make them themselves, which is what happened here (and which is why each Mega Drive has a different manufacturer for its 68000). If the Z80 was missing, most games would have no sound (or not all sound). In later revisions, the Z80 was integrated into a custom ASIC which also incorporated the major chips of the system.

Genesis 3

Main article: Genesis 3.
A Genesis 3.

The Genesis 3 was a small version manufactured by Majesco in 1998 for the American market, which they had been manufacturing for until then. It is much smaller than its predecessors and lacks all expansions and fixes memory controller bugs — both rendering some games unplayable and the Sega CD and 32X unusable.

Portables: Mega Jet and Nomad

Main articles: Sega Mega Jet and Sega Nomad.

The Mega Jet and Nomad were portable Mega Drive systems released near the middle/end of the system's lifetime. The Mega Jet, released in 1994, was originally designed for use on JAL airliners but was later released for Japanese consumers. The Mega Jet is a semi-portable system; the system has a built-in controller but requires an external power supply and a TV. The Nomad was a full portable in its own right, having an integrated screen and sound capabilities, in addition to a battery pack.

Arcade hardware: Mega Tech, Mega Play, and the System C

Main articles: Mega Tech, Mega Play, System C.

The Mega Drive hardware was adapted for arcade use several times over the course of its life. The Mega Tech and Mega Play allowed arcade operators to provide somewhat modified versions of popular Mega Drive games for arcade play — these systems use special cartridges containing games and players can choose from the games plugged into the system. The System C is a different board built from modified Mega Drive hardware, boasting improved color abilities and (in later revisions known collectively as the System C2) improved sample playback. The System C was primarily home to puzzle games — Columns and Puyo Puyo were released on this hardware.

Data East is also known to have licensed Mega Drive hardware for an arcade version of High Seas Havoc; not much is known about this board.

Mega-CD combos: JVC Wondermega/X'eye, Pioneer LaserActive, Sega Multi-Mega, and Aiwa Mega CD

Main articles: Wondermega, LaserActive, Sega Multi-Mega, Aiwa Mega CD.

Combination Mega Drive/Mega-CD units were developed over the course of the Mega-CD's lifetime. The Wondermega and LaserActive are standalone consoles; the LaserActive also plays LaserDiscs. The Multi-Mega is a portable audio CD player that can play Mega Drive and Mega-CD games when plugged in to wall power and a TV. The Aiwa Mega CD is a Mega Drive/Mega-CD packed into Aiwa's consumer-level portable CD stereos.

Computer combinations: Sega Teradrive, Amstrad Mega PC, al-Alamiah units

Main articles: Sega Teradrive, Amstrad Mega PC, Al-Alamiah AX-660, Al-Alamiah AX-990.

The Teradrive and Mega PC are combination Mega Drive/IBM-compatible PCs made for the Japanese and UK markets, respectively. The three Al-Alamiah computers are combination Mega Drive/MSX computers for the Arabic market.

Modern System-on-a-Chip compilations

A variety of companies now make licensed system-on-a-chip units in a variety of fashions that contain single-chip Mega Drive implementations and several licensed ROM images. TecToy-made SoaCs also contain several "new" MD games, however these are believed to be — and likely are — Java 2 Mobile Edition games running on additional hardware. For a full list of SoaCs, see the template at the bottom of the page.

Cartridges

Main article: Sega Mega Drive cartridges.

Technical specifications

  • System master clock rate: 53.693175 MHz (NTSC), 53.203424 MHz (PAL)[6]
    • Master clock cycles per frame: 896,040 (NTSC), 1,067,040 (PAL)
    • Master clock cycles per scanline: 3420[7]

Processors

  • Main CPU: Motorola 68000
    • Clock rate: 7.670453 MHz (NTSC), 7.600489 MHz (PAL)
    • The 68000 has a 24‑bit address space, allowing access to up to 16 MB of memory. Sega's memory map for the Mega Drive allowed games to be up to 4 MB without the use of a memory mapper; games that tried to go up to 10 MB would find their memory maps crushed by the Sega CD (which took the second 4 MB block) and Sega 32X (which took 2 MB of the third 4 MB block). All devices are memory mapped.
      • Games using save memory also needed to have the memory in the cartridge map; larger games, such as Phantasy Star IV, used a mapper to swap out cart space for SRAM during a save.
    • Instruction set: 16‑bit and 32‑bit CISC instructions
    • Data bus width: 32-bit internal,[8] 16‑bit external[9]
    • External data bus clock rate: 5 MHz (5 MB/s external data access bandwidth)[10]
    • Arithmetic logic units: 16-bit data ALU, 32-bit address ALU (2x 16-bit ALU)[11]
  • Sound CPU: Zilog Z80
    • Clock rate: 3.579545 MHz (NTSC), 3.546894 MHz (PAL)
    • Some games did not use the Z80, other games used it only for sample playback, but most used it for sound processing
    • 8 KB program RAM which the 68000 and the Z80 can freely write to (though the 68000 must request the Z80 bus)
    • Can access 32 KB of the 68000 memory map at once (while it should be used for accessing the cartridge, setting the bank register elsewhere can work on some hardware)
    • Instruction set: 8‑bit and 16‑bit instructions
    • Data bus width: 8‑bit
  • CPU instruction performance: 1.861363 MIPS (NTSC), 1.844386 MIPS (PAL)[12]
    • 68000 performance: 1.342329 MIPS (NTSC), 1.330086 MIPS (PAL)
    • Z80 performance: 0.519034 MIPS (NTSC), 0.5143 MIPS (PAL)

Sound

  • FM sound chip: Yamaha YM2612, clocked at the 68000 clock speed (7.670453 MHz in NTSC, 7.600489 MHz in PAL)
    • 6 channels of FM synthesis, Operator Type‑N
      • The third channel can enter a Special Mode, or multifrequency mode, where each individual operator has a different frequency
      • The sixth channel can enter a DAC mode where the sound program constantly streams 8‑bit unsigned PCM data to mix directly into the output waveform
    • 1 sine wave LFO (low frequency oscillator) channel
    • Mapped to the Z80 address space — 68000 must request the Z80 bus to use
    • Some Mega Drive 2 systems actually use the core from the chip's CMOS equivalent, the YM3438
    • IRQ interrupt capabilities: IRQ2 sound interrupt[15]
  • PSG sound chip: Sega PSG (SN76496),[16] clocked at the Z80 clock speed (3.579545 MHz in NTSC, 3.546894 MHz in PAL) and built into the VDP — same as with the Master System
    • Based on TI SN76489
    • 4 audio channels: Three channels of pure square wave tones, and one noise channel
      • The noise channel can play either white noise or "periodic noise" either at one of three preset frequencies or using the frequency of the third tone channel (consequently, that channel will be mute)
    • Can be freely accessed by both the 68000 through the VDP and the Z80 through its memory map
  • The cartridge connector has two pins which allow stereo sound mixing directly from cart. No game used this, however, but the 32X uses it for its PWM audio
  • The Mega Drive 1 has mono audio output from the TV output and stereo output from a built‑in headphone jack, plus a built‑in volume control. Future models drop the headphone jack and do stereo output from the TV output

Graphics

  • GPU: Sega 315‑5313 VDP (Yamaha YM7101)[6][17]
    • An evolution of the Sega Master System VDP (which is, in turn, an evolution of the TMS9918)
    • All TMS9918 modes were removed and replaced with several new modes
    • Controls background playfields and foreground sprites[18]
    • Clock rate: 13.423294 MHz (NTSC), 13.300856 MHz (PAL)
    • Pixel clock rate: 6.711647 MHz (NTSC), 6.650428 MHz (PAL)
    • Internal data bus: 16-bit[19]
    • External data buses: 16-bit CPU bus,[19] 8/16-bit VRAM bus (Dual Port VRAM, 16-bit RAM/SAM, 8-bit RAM)
    • IRQ interrupt capabilities: IRQ6 VBlank interrupt, IRQ4 H‑Int (Horizontal Interrupt) scanline interrupt[15]
    • DMA controller: Capable of DMA, high-speed fills and memory transfers, can transfer data from 68000 address space to VRAM/CRAM/VSRAM during active display and VBlank[20]
  • RGB/Composite Video Encoder DAC: Sony CXA1145 (NTSC/PAL)[6][21] / Fujitsu MB3514 (PAL)[17][22]
    • Colorburst clock frequency: 3.579545 MHz (NTSC), 4.433618 MHz (PAL)[23]
  • Progressive scan resolutions:
    • NTSC: 320×224, 256×224
    • PAL: 320×224, 256×224, 320×240, 256×240
  • Interlaced resolutions:
    • NTSC: 320×448, 256×448
    • PAL: 320×448, 256×448, 320×480, 256×480
    • Note: "Interlaced mode" doubles the height of all resolutions; it was used by some games, such as Sonic 2 for two‑player mode.
  • Overscan resolutions:
    • Progressive scan: 427×262 (NTSC), 423×312 (PAL)[24]
    • Interlaced: 427×524 (NTSC), 423×624 (PAL)
  • Tilemap resolutions: 256×256 to 512×512 and 1024×256
  • Refresh rate: 59.92274 Hz (NTSC), 49.701459 Hz (PAL)[25]
    • Maximum frame rate: 59.92274 frames/sec (NTSC), 49.701459 frames/sec (PAL)
  • Four graphics planes: 2 scrolling tile planes (grids of tiles), "window" tile plane (cannot be transparent), sprite plane
    • Tilemap background planes: 2 scrolling planes, with horizontal and vertical tile flipping, individual tile priority, 6 tilemap sizes (256x256, 256x512, 256x1024, 512x256, 512x512, 1024x256),[26] 32 bytes per tile,[26] 16 colors per tile
      • Scrolling capabilities: Parallax scrolling, line and row scrolling, vertical and horizontal line scrolling, column scrolling.[27][28]
      • 40–64 scrolling layers: Each of the 2 tilemap planes can be split into multiple scrolling layers, 32 one-tile rows and 20 two-tile columns. Each scanline, row and column can be scrolled at different rates, and each row can be overlapped.[27][29]
    • Background window plane, behind scrolling planes[28]
    • Sprite plane: 80 sprites on screen, 20 sprites per scanline, 16 sprite sizes (8×8 to 32×32 pixels),[14] 16 colors per sprite,[30] integer sprite zooming[31] (up to 320x224),[28] definable sprite priorities, 32 bytes per sprite tile,[18] sprite flipping, virtual 512×512 sprite space,[32] sprites can be combined into larger sprites, up to 1280 sprite tiles (80x 32×32 sprites)
    • Note: Priorities can be defined between planes.[18]
  • Color palette:[33]
    • Standard: 512 colors (9-bit RGB)
    • Shadow/Highlight mode: 1536 colors
  • Colors on screen:[33][29]
    • Standard: 61–64 colors
    • Shadow/Highlight: 114–192 colors
    • Mid‑frame palette swap: 75–256 colors (see Blast Processing below)
    • Direct color: 256–512 colors (see Blast Processing below)
  • Colors per pixel: 16 colors (4‑bit)[20]
    • Mid‑frame palette swap: 16 colors (4-bit) to 256 colors (8-bit)
    • Direct color: 256 colors (8-bit) to 512 colors (9-bit)
  • Shadow/Highlight: Hardware lighting,[33] shadow generation (matching each character's shape),[28] triples color palette and colors on screen, increases colors per tile
  • Video RAM: 64 KB VRAM (Dual-Port VRAM) — used to store graphics tiles, mappings for all layers, and horizontal scrolling[34]
    • Scroll A Pattern Table: 2 KB (256x256) to 8 KB (512x512, 1024x256) for background tilemap plane A
    • Scroll B Pattern Table: 2 KB (256x256) to 8 KB (512x512, 1024x256) for background tilemap plane B
    • Window Pattern Name Table: 2 KB (256x224, 256x240) to 4 KB (320x224, 320x240) for static window plane
    • H Scroll Data Table: 1 KB for horizontal scrolling
    • Sprite Attribute Table: 512 bytes (256x224, 256x240) to 1 KB (320x224, 320x240) for sprite attributes
    • Pattern Generator Table: 2 KB to 56.5 KB for background tiles (64 to 1808 tiles, 32 KB per tile)
    • Sprite Generator Table: Up to 40 KB for sprite tiles (up to 1280 tiles, 32 KB per tile)
    • SAM buffer: 256 bytes separate cache within VRAM chips, for sending continuous stream of video screen refresh data to VDP while it reads/writes VRAM
  • VDP internal cache: 232 bytes
    • 64 9‑bit words (72 bytes) of internal CRAM (Color RAM) — used to store the color palette
      • 64 colors split into four 16‑color lines; each tile can be drawn with one of these four color lines
      • The first color in each line is transparent and any color of the entire palette can be used as a "background color" (when no pixels are drawn at a location); consequently the Mega Drive can display 61 colors on screen at once (unless raster effects or the Shadow/Highlight modes are used, in which case this number increases depending on the extent used)
      • Colors are 9‑bit RGB with 3 bits per color component, allowing for 512 colors
      • Shadow/Highlight modes increase color gamut (183—192 colors on screen, out of 1536 color palette)
    • 80 bytes internal VSRAM (Vertical Scrolling RAM) — used for vertical scrolling (10‑bit words, up to 20 different vertical scroll values for each of the two scrolling playfields)[14]
    • 80 bytes internal sprite buffer — 8 bytes per sprite[35][36]
  • Other features: Semi‑transparency, FIFO memory circuit design, read/write of one line buffer method for drawing[28]

Blast Processing

See Blast processing for more details and technical comparison with SNES

The term Blast Processing was primarily a reference to the Mega Drive VDP graphics processor's powerful DMA controller that could handle DMA (direct memory access) operations at much faster speeds than the Super Nintendo.[37] The Mega Drive could write to VRAM during active display and VBlank,[14] and had a faster memory bandwidth than the SNES. The quicker DMA transfer rates and bandwidth gave the Mega Drive a faster performance than the SNES,[38] and helped give the Mega Drive a higher fillrate, higher gameplay resolution, faster parallax scrolling, fast data blitting, and high frame-rate with many moving objects on screen, and allowed it to display more unique tiles (background and sprite tiles) and large sprites (32×32 and higher) on screen, and quickly transfer more unique tiles and large sprites (16×16 and higher) on screen.

The Mega Drive's DMA capabilities also helped give it more flexibility, allowing the hardware to be programmed in various different ways. With DMA programming, it could replicate some of the Super Nintendo's hardware features, such as larger 64×64 sprites (combining 32×32 sprites), background scaling and rotation (like the Sega X Board and Mode 7), and direct color (increasing colors on screen). Other DMA programmable capabilities of the Mega Drive include mid-frame palette swaps (increasing colors per scanline), sprite scaling and rotation, ray casting, bitmap framebuffers, and 3D polygon graphics; the base Mega Drive hardware (without needing any enhancement chips) could render 3D polygons with a performance comparable to the Super Nintendo's optional Super FX enhancement chip,[39][40] which itself is significantly outperformed by the Mega Drive's optional Sega Virtua Processor (SVP) enhancement chip.

  • DMA controller: Sega 315‑5313 VDP (Yamaha YM7101)[41][24]
    • VRAM transfer per scanline: 205 bytes per VBlank scanline, 18 bytes per active scanline
    • CRAM/VSRAM transfer per scanline: 410 bytes per VBlank scanline, 36 bytes per active scanline
    • VBlank scanlines in standard 224-line display: 38 (NTSC), 88 (PAL)
    • VBlank scanlines in custom 160-line display: 103 (NTSC), 153 (PAL)[42]
    • Refresh rate: 59.92274 Hz (NTSC), 49.701459 Hz (PAL)
  • VRAM bandwidth: 8–11.764705 MB/s (NTSC), 8–8.333333 MB/s (PAL) (see Memory below)[41][24]
    • Maximum DMA transfer rate: 3.21845 MB/s (inactive display)
    • Maximum DMA transfer per frame: 53.71 KB (NTSC), 63.96 KB (PAL)
    • DMA transfer per frame during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 11.822 KB (NTSC), 22.072 KB (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 23.995 KB (NTSC), 34.245 KB (PAL)
    • DMA transfer rate during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 708.406 KB/s (NTSC), 1.09701 MB/s (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 1.437846 MB/s (NTSC), 1.702026 MB/s (PAL)
  • CRAM/VSRAM cache bandwidth: 26.846588 MB/s (NTSC), 26.601712 MB/s (PAL) (see Memory below)[41][24]
    • Maximum DMA transfer rate: 6.4369 MB/s (inactive display)
    • Maximum DMA transfer per frame: 107.42 KB (NTSC), 127.92 KB (PAL)
    • DMA transfer per frame during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 23.644 KB (NTSC), 44.144 KB (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 47.99 KB (NTSC), 68.490 KB (PAL)
    • DMA transfer rate during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 1.416813 MB/s (NTSC), 2.194021 MB/s (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 2.875692 MB/s (NTSC), 3.404052 MB/s (PAL)
  • Pixel fillrate: 6.934358 MPixels/s (NTSC), 6.650428 MPixels/s (PAL)
    • Maximum write fillrate: 6.4369 MPixels/s, 410 pixels/scanline
    • Maximum write per frame: 107,420 pixels (NTSC), 127,920 pixels (PAL)
    • Write per frame during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 23,644 pixels (NTSC), 44,144 pixels (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 47,990 pixels (NTSC), 68,490 pixels (PAL)
    • Write fillrate during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 1.416813 MPixels/s (NTSC), 2.194021 MPixels/s (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 2.875692 MPixels/s (NTSC), 3.404052 MPixels/s (PAL)
  • Tile fillrate: 1808 tiles per frame,[26] 108,340 tiles/sec (NTSC), 89,860 tiles/sec (PAL)
    • Texel fillrate: 115,712 texels (1808x 8×8 tiles) per frame, 6.934358 MTexels/s (NTSC), 5.751055 MTexels/s (PAL)
    • Tile transfer per frame during active display:
      • Standard 224-line display: 369 tiles (NTSC), 689 tiles (PAL)
      • Custom 160-line display: 749 tiles (NTSC), 1070 tiles (PAL)
  • Sprite fillrate: 80 sprites/frame, 4793 sprites/sec (NTSC), 3976 sprites/sec (PAL)
    • Sprite texel fillrate: 320 texels/scanline, 81,920 texels (80× 32×32 sprites) per frame,[33] 4.90887 MTexels/s (NTSC), 4.071543 MTexels/s (PAL)
    • Sprite tile fillrate: 1280 sprite tiles (80x 32×32 sprites) per frame, 76,701 sprite tiles/sec (NTSC), 63,617 sprite tiles/sec (PAL)
    • Sprite display per frame: 80 sprites (8×8 to 32×32), 20 sprites (64×64), 4 sprites (128×128)
      • Sprite display per scanline: 20 sprites (8×8 to 16×16), 13 sprites (24×24), 10 sprites (32×32), 5 sprites (64×64)
    • Sprite transfer per frame during standard 224-line active display:
      • NTSC: 80 sprites (8×8 to 16×16), 41 sprites (24×24), 23 sprites (32×32), 5 sprites (64×64)
      • PAL: 80 sprites (8×8 to 16×16), 76 sprites (24×24), 43 sprites (32×32), 10 sprites (64×64)
    • Sprite transfer per frame during custom 160-line active display:
      • NTSC: 80 sprites (8×8 to 24×24), 46 sprites (32×32), 11 sprites (64×64)
      • PAL: 80 sprites (8×8 to 24×24), 66 sprites (32×32), 16 sprites (64×64)
  • Effective fillrate: 2 tilemaps (256×256 to 512×512), 80 sprites (8×8 to 32×32)
    • Effective tile fillrate: 1808–9472 tiles/frame, 108,340–567,588 tiles/sec
    • Effective pixel fillrate: 115,712–606,208 pixels/frame, 6.934358–36.325644 MPixels/s
  • Programmable custom resolutions:
    • Display resolutions: 128×160 to 256×160, 128×224 to 160×224
    • Background tilemap planes: 128×160 to 768×512[43]
    • Bitmap framebuffer:
      • Single buffering: 128×160 to 512×256 and 320×408
      • Double buffering: 128×160 to 256×256 and 320×204
  • Mid-frame palette swap: Can use DMA to change color while drawing each scanline, sending more data/colors to the CRAM and DAC[44][28]
    • Colors on screen: 75 colors (Sonic 2) to 512 colors (demo with scrolling background)
    • Shadow/Highlight colors on screen: 114 colors (Sonic 2 prototype) to 1536 colors (demo with scrolling background)
    • Colors per pixel: 16 colors (4-bit) to 256 colors (8-bit)
  • Direct color: Can use DMA to reprogram CRAM from a color palette to a direct color display[38]
    • Colors on screen: 256 colors (8-bit) to 512 colors (9-bit)
    • Colors per pixel: 256 colors (8-bit) to 512 colors (9-bit)
    • Resolutions: 160×224, 128×224
  • 3D polygon graphics: Capable of 3D polygons with stock Mega Drive hardware (without needing enhancement chips), capable of 3D texture mapping,[45] can use DMA to render bitmap framebuffer (double-buffered) that displays 3D polygons[39][42]
    • Vertex transformations: 767 cycles/vertex,[46] 10,000 vertices/sec, 500 vertices/frame
    • Polygon transformations: 2301 cycles/triangle, 3333 polys/sec, 166 polys/frame
    • Framebuffer: 256×160, double-buffered, 15–30 FPS,[40] 40 KB memory, 614.4 KB/s (10 FPS) to 1.2288 MB/s (30 FPS) bandwidth, 2.383275 cycles per byte, 1.464285 MHz (15 FPS) to 2.928568 MHz (30 FPS) DMA, 4.741885 MHz (30 FPS) to 6.206168 MHz (15 FPS) remaining for polygons
    • Flat shading: Scanline rendering, 250 cycles/scanline per poly,[46][47] 3301 cycles/poly (32-pixel), 1800 polys/sec (32-pixel polys, 15 FPS), 166 polys/frame
    • Polygon memory: 40 bytes/poly, 6.485 KB memory (166 polys/frame), 72 KB/s bandwidth (1880 polys/sec)
    • Texture mapping: 150 polys/sec, 15 polys/frame[45]
  • Other DMA programmable capabilities: Scaling and rotation (like Sega X Board and Mode 7),[48][49] ray casting
  • Optional cartridge enhancement chip: Sega Virtua Processor (only used in Virtua Racing), enhances Mega Drive's 3D polygon performance to 9000 polys/sec, along with higher memory, bandwidth, fillrate, framebuffer resolution and frame rate

Memory

Configuration

  • System memory buses:[6]
    • 16‑bit system bus — 68000 & VDP <‑> Main RAM & Cartridge ROM/RAM
    • 8‑bit system bus — Z80 & YM2612 <‑> Audio RAM
    • 8/16‑bit video bus — VDP <‑> VRAM
  • System RAM chips:[17][50]
    • Main RAM: 16‑bit (2x 8‑bit), PSRAM, 5.263157 MHz, 190 ns cycles[56][57]
      • CPU access: 5 MHz
    • VRAM: 8/16-bit Dual‑Port VRAM, 16-bit RAM/SRAM, 8-bit RAM (see Mega Drive PCB revisions)[58][59]
      • FPM DRAM: 2048-bit internal (8x 256-bit arrays), 8-bit external (2x 4‑bit), 11.764705 MHz (NTSC, 85 ns),[51] 8.333333 MHz (PAL, 120 ns),[60] 8 MHz (125 ns, when reading SAM)[51]
      • SAM buffer cache: 8-bit (2x 4‑bit), 13.423294 MHz (NTSC, 74 ns), 13.300856 MHz (PAL, 75 ns), VDP reads continuous stream of video screen refresh data from SAM while reading/writing DRAM[61]
    • Audio RAM: 8‑bit, SRAM/XRAM, 3.030303 MHz, 330 ns cycles[62][63][64][65]
  • Cartridge ROM chips: 16‑bit[66]

Bandwidth

  • System RAM bandwidth: 21.556617–25.321322 MB/s (NTSC), 21.556617–21.88995 MB/s (PAL)
    • Main RAM: 10.526314 MB/s (16-bit, 5.263157 MHz)
      • CPU access: 5 MB/s (5 MHz)
    • VRAM: 8–11.764705 MB/s (NTSC), 8–8.333333 MB/s (PAL)
      • FPM DRAM: 11.764705 MB/s (NTSC), 8.333333 MB/s (PAL), 8 MB/s (when reading SAM)
      • SAM buffer cache: 13.423294 MB/s (NTSC), 13.300856 MB/s (PAL)
    • Audio RAM: 3.030303 MB/s (8-bit, 3.030303 MHz)
  • Cartridge ROM bandwidth: 10 MB/s (most cartridges), 15.200978–15.340906 MB/s (some cartridges)
    • CPU access: 5 MB/s (5 MHz)
  • Internal processor bandwidth:
    • 68000 internal bus: 30.681812 MB/s (NTSC, 32-bit, 7.670453 MHz), 30.401956 MB/s (PAL, 32-bit, 7.600489 MHz)
    • Z80 internal bus: 3.579545 MB/s (NTSC), 3.546894 MB/s (PAL)
    • VDP internal RAM cache: 26.846588 MB/s (NTSC, 16-bit, 13.423294 MHz), 26.601712 MB/s (PAL, 16-bit, 13.423294 MHz)

Memory map

Mega Drive Memory Map
Start End Size Description
$000000 $3FFFFF $400000 ROM Cartridge
$400000 $7FFFFF $400000 Expansion Port Area (used by the Sega CD)
$800000 $9FFFFF $200000 Unallocated (used by the Sega 32X)
$A00000 $A0FFFF $10000 Z80 Memory
$A10000 $A10FFF only various meaningful System registers
$A11000 $A11FFF only $A11100 and $A11200 meaningful Z80 control (/BUSREQ and /RESET lines)
$A12000 $AFFFFF only several meaningful Assorted registers
$B00000 $BFFFFF $100000 Unallocated
$C00000 $DFFFFF $1F; mirrored VDP
$E00000 $FFFFFF $10000; mirrored Work RAM (games usually only use the uppermost mirror, at $FF0000)

Input

  • Controller input: Two male DE‑9 controller ports; one female DE‑9 expansion port (early MD1s only)
    • Controller ports support two modes: parallel and serial
    • Parallel supports 7‑bit bidirectional, with the console setting the direction of each bit.
    • Parallel also supports optional active‑low interrupts on the TH line. (mapped to 68000 IRQ 2)
    • Serial mode supports up to 4800 bps. (used by the Mega Modem on port 3)
  • Expansion port: Used for Sega CD.
    • Provides access to /FDC ($A120xx) and /DISK to indicate Sega CD presence.
    • Maps Sega CD PRG RAM to $000000 when no cartridge is present, $400000 otherwise.

History

Main article: History of the Sega Mega Drive.

Games

Main article: List of Mega Drive games.

Launch titles

A Japanese Sega Mega Drive (Model 1) overloaded with add-ons including the Sega Mega-CD (Model 1), Sega 32X, Remote Arcade System and Mega-CD Karaoke.

Japan

North America

Europe

Magazine articles

Main article: Sega Mega Drive/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

Print advertisements

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Print advert in GamePro (US) #3: "September/October 1989" (1989-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Game Players (US) #0105: "Vol. 1 No. 5 November 1989" (1989-1x-xx)
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Print advert in Electronic Gaming Monthly (US) #27: "October 1991" (1991-xx-xx)
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Print advert in ACE (UK) #37: "October 1990" (1990-09-xx)
also published in:
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Print advert in Computer & Video Games (UK) #108: "November 1990" (1990-10-16)
also published in:
  • ACE (UK) #38: "November 1990" (1990-10-xx)[75]
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Print advert in Sega Power (UK) #13: "December 1990" (1990-11-01)
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Print advert in Sega Power (UK) #14: "January 1991" (1990-12-06)
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Print advert in Computer & Video Games (UK) #111: "February 1991" (1991-01-16)
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Print advert in Computer & Video Games (UK) #113: "April 1991" (1991-03-16)
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Print advert in Computer & Video Games (UK) #122: "January 1992" (1991-12-15)
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Print advert in Computer & Video Games (UK) #126: "May 1992" (1992-04-15)
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Print advert in Computer & Video Games (UK) #157: "December 1994" (1994-11-15)
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Print advert in Player One (FR) #1: "Septembre 1990" (1990-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Joystick (FR) #27: "Mai 1992" (1992-0x-xx)
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Print advert in Power Play (DE)
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Print advert in Power Play (DE)
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Print advert in Gamers (DE) #1992-01: "Februar/März 1992" (1992-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Video Games (DE) #1992-11: "11/92" (1992-10-28)
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Print advert in Hobby Consolas (ES) #2: "Noviembre 1991" (1991-1x-xx)
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Print advert in OK Consolas (ES) #12: "xxxx 1992" (1992-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Micromanía (ES)
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Print advert in Micromanía (ES)
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Print advert in Micromanía (ES)
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Print advert in Hobby Consolas (ES) #37: "Octubre 1994" (1994-xx-xx)
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Print advert in K (IT) #22: "Novembre 1990" (1990-xx-xx)
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Print advert in K (IT) #24: "Gennaio 1991" (199x-xx-xx)
also published in:
  • K (IT) #25: "Febbraio 1991" (199x-xx-xx)[92]
  • K (IT) #26: "Marzo 1991" (1991-xx-xx)[93]
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Print advert in K (IT) #27: "Aprile 1991" (1991-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Mega Force (PT) #1: "Junho 1993" (1993-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Mega Force (PT) #1: "Junho 1993" (1993-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Mega Force (PT) #3: "Agosto 1993" (1993-xx-xx)
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Print advert in Sega Force (SE) #1992-01: "1/92" (1992-xx-xx)
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Retailers

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Toys 'R' Us print advert in Sega Visions (US) #1: "June/July 1990" (1990-xx-xx)
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Kay-Bee print advert in Sega Visions (US) #1: "June/July 1990" (1990-xx-xx)
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Sears print advert in Sega Visions (US) #9: "August/September 1992" (1992-xx-xx)
also published in:
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Pamphlets

Television advertisements

Artwork

References

  1. Interview: Joe Miller (2013-02-07) by Sega-16
  2. Fourth generation of video games, Video Game Sales Wiki
  3. 3.0 3.1 What's hot: Amiga or Sega?, Compute!, Issue 125 (January 1991), page A32
  4. Blitter Speed, Amiga Hardware Reference Manual
  5. Before the Crash: Early Video Game History, page 173
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 File:Sega Service Manual - Genesis II - Mega Drive II (PAL) - 001 - June 1993.pdf
  7. https://github.com/ekeeke/Genesis-Plus-GX/blob/master/core/system.h
  8. Hardware and Computer Organization, page 136
  9. http://www.digitpress.com/faq/megadrive.htm
  10. 10.0 10.1 Ben Heck’s 16-Bit Console Wars! (6:07), The Ben Heck Show
  11. The 68000 Microprocessor, page 5
  12. Obsolete Microprocessors
  13. FM-Drive User Manual
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf
  15. 15.0 15.1 Genesis (MESS)
  16. SN76496 (MAME)
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 Mega Drive PCB revisions
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 2
  19. 19.0 19.1 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 15
  20. 20.0 20.1 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 3
  21. File:CXA1145P datasheet.pdf
  22. File:MB3514 datasheet.pdf
  23. 315-5313 Information
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 14
  25. Genesis Plus
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 13
  27. 27.0 27.1 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 46
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 28.3 28.4 28.5 How Sega Built the Genesis: Masami Ishikawa Inteview
  29. 29.0 29.1 Sega Genesis Comparison, Game Pilgrimage
  30. Sega Programming FAQ (October 18, 1995) (Wayback Machine: 2001-01-14 21:14)
  31. Sega Master System VDP Documentation
  32. 32.0 32.1 Sega Genesis VDP Documentation
  33. 33.0 33.1 33.2 33.3 Sega Genesis VDP Documentation
  34. File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 79
  35. 35.0 35.1 VDP: Sprites, Mega Drive Wiki
  36. 36.0 36.1 VDP Sprite, SGDK
  37. Blast Processing 101
  38. 38.0 38.1 Sega Genesis vs Super Nintendo
  39. 39.0 39.1 3D math engine (SGDK)
  40. 40.0 40.1 Star Fox 3D Tech Demo on Sega Genesis: Version 2 Using DMA (YouTube)
  41. 41.0 41.1 41.2 File:GenesisTechnicalOverview.pdf, page 45
  42. 42.0 42.1 Bitmap engine (SGDK)
  43. Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (The Cutting Room Floor)
  44. The Man Responsible For Sega's Blast Processing Gimmick Is Sorry For Creating "That Ghastly Phrase (Nintendo Life)
  45. 45.0 45.1 D Polygonal Texturé - MegaDrive/Genesis (YouTube)
  46. 46.0 46.1 Polygon cycles
  47. 3D on the Sega Genesis is possible (SpritesMind)
  48. Sega Genesis Games That Pushed The Limits of Graphics & Sound (Racket Boy)
  49. Mode 7 demo for Genesis/MD (SpritesMind)
  50. 50.0 50.1 File:Sega Service Manual - Genesis II - Mega Drive II (PAL) - 001 - June 1993.pdf, page 8
  51. 51.0 51.1 51.2 File:UPD41264 datasheet.pdf
  52. 2010's Sega Mega Drive RPG Pier Solar coming to Xbox 360, PC and Mac in HD, Eurogamer
  53. SSFII Genesis Technical Information (2000-07-26)
  54. MegaDrive/Genesis Pinouts
  55. 55.0 55.1 Second Dimension R&T DxS-GEN24STH-01
  56. File:HM65256B datasheet.pdf
  57. File:TC51832 datasheet.pdf
  58. File:HM53461 datasheet.pdf
  59. File:KM424C64 datasheet.pdf
  60. File:MB81461 datasheet.pdf
  61. Understanding VRAM and SGRAM Operation, page 3, IBM
  62. File:TMM2063P datasheet.pdf
  63. File:UPD4168 datasheet.pdf
  64. File:KM6264B datasheet.pdf
  65. File:LC3664R datasheet.pdf
  66. ROM Part Numbers
  67. File:MB834200A datasheet.pdf
  68. 68.0 68.1 File:MB838200B datasheet.pdf
  69. File:M27C322 datasheet.pdf
  70. GamePro, "November 1989" (US; 1989-xx-xx), page 52
  71. GamePro, "December 1989" (US; 1989-xx-xx), page 22
  72. VideoGames & Computer Entertainment, "December 1989" (US; 1989-1x-xx), page 40
  73. Game Players, "Vol. 1 No. 6 December 1989" (US; 1989-1x-xx), page 26
  74. Computer & Video Games, "October 1990" (UK; 1990-09-16), page 122
  75. ACE, "November 1990" (UK; 1990-10-xx), page 36
  76. ACE, "December 1990" (UK; 1990-11-xx), page 108
  77. Computer & Video Games, "December 1990" (UK; 1990-11-16), page 46
  78. Raze, "January 1991" (UK; 1990-11-29), page 64
  79. Computer & Video Games, "January 1991" (UK; 1990-12-15), page 86
  80. Raze, "February 1991" (UK; 1990-12-20), page 12
  81. Raze, "March 1991" (UK; 1991-01-31), page 12
  82. Computer & Video Games, "May 1991" (UK; 1991-04-14), page 67
  83. Joystick, "Octobre 1990" (FR; 1990-xx-xx), page 86
  84. Joystick, "Juillet/Août 1992" (FR; 1992-0x-xx), page 179
  85. Joypad, "Juin 1992" (FR; 1992-05-1x), page 83
  86. Joypad, "Juin 1992" (FR; 1992-05-1x), page 163
  87. ', "xxxx 1992" (; 1992-xx-xx), page 32
  88. ', "xxxx 1992" (; 1992-xx-xx), page 28
  89. K, "Dicembre 1990" (IT; 1990-xx-xx), page 2
  90. Guida Video Giochi, "Novembre 1990" (IT; 1990-1x-xx), page 15
  91. Guida Video Giochi, "Dicembre 1990" (IT; 1990-1x-xx), page 9
  92. K, "Febbraio 1991" (IT; 199x-xx-xx), page 15
  93. K, "Marzo 1991" (IT; 1991-xx-xx), page 64
  94. Bestial!, "xxxx xxxx" (PT; 1993-xx-xx), page 32
  95. Sega Force, "2/92" (SE; 1992-11-19), page 36
  96. Sega Force, "1/93" (SE; 1993-01-14), page 23
  97. Sega Force, "2/93" (SE; 1993-03-18), page 17
  98. Sega Visions, "November/December 1992" (US; 1992-xx-xx), page 5
  99. Electronic Gaming Monthly, "1993 Video Game Buyer's Guide" (US; 199x-xx-xx), page 51
  100. Sega Visions, "February/March 1993" (US; 199x-xx-xx), page 7


Sega Mega Drive
Topics Technical specifications (Hardware comparison) | History | List of games | Magazine articles | Promotional material | Merchandise | Cartridges | TradeMark Security System
Hardware Japan | North America | Western Europe | Eastern Europe | South America | Asia | South Korea | Australasia | Africa
EZ Games | LaserActive | Mega Jet | Mega PC | Mega Play | Mega-Tech System | Nomad | Teradrive | Mega Drive Mini | Mega Drive Mini 2
New Mega Drive | Tianli VCD/DVD Players | "Consoles on a chip" | Licensed clones (Magic 2 | Mega Game II | Power Pegasus | Super Bitman)
Unlicensed clones
Add-ons Game Box | Power Base Converter | Mega-CD | 32X (Mega-CD 32X) | Mega Modem | Demo System DS-16
Cases Sega Genesis Nomad Carrying Case | System Carry Case
Controllers Control Pad | Six Button Control Pad | 6 Button Arcade Pad | Arcade Power Stick 6B | Konami Justifier | MK-1470
Action Chair | Activator | Arcade Power Stick | Keyboard | MegaFire | Mouse | Mega Stick | Menacer | Remote Arcade System | Ten Key Pad | Third Party Controllers
Accessories 4 Way Play | Cleaning System | Control Pad Extension Cord | Genesis Speakers | Headset | HeartBeat Catalyst | Microphone | Region converter cartridges | Mega Terminal | Nomad PowerBack | RF Unit (Mega Drive 2) | SCART Cable (Mega Drive 2) | Stereo Audio Video Cable | Team Player | Video Monitor Cable | Third Party Accessories
Network services Sega Channel | Sega Game Toshokan | Mega Anser | Mega Net | TeleBradesco Residência | XB∀ND
Development tools ERX 308P | ERX 318P | Sprobe | SNASM68K | SNASM2 (Mega Drive) | SNASM2 (32X) | PSY-Q Development System (Mega Drive) | PSY-Q Development System (32X) | 32X CartDev | Sega Mars Development Aid System | Sega 32X Development Target
Unreleased Edge 16 | Floppy Disk Drive | Mega Play 1010 | Sega VR | Teleplay System | Video Jukebox
Sega Home Video Game Systems
83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11
SG-1000 SG-1000 II Mega Drive Mega Drive II
SC-3000 Mega-CD Mega-CD II Genesis 3
Sega Mark III 32X Dreamcast
Master System Master System II
AI Computer Game Gear
Saturn
Pico Beena