Rail Chase: The Ride

From Sega Retro

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Yokohama RailChase.jpg
Rail Chase: The Ride
System(s): Large attraction
Publisher: Sega Enterprises, Ltd.
Developer:
Release Date RRP Code
Large attraction
JP
¥? ?
Large attraction
AU
$? ?

Rail Chase: The Ride (レールチェイス ザ ライド) is a large attraction developed by Sega AM5. Based on the titular Rail Chase series and using its minecart ride concept as the basis for a three-minute long themed roller coaster,[2] the attraction made three appearances at Sega's flagship Amusement Theme Park venues during the mid 1990s. Its final Sega World Sydney incarnation is notably thought to still be in operation in a modified capacity at the Haailand resort in India.[3]

Story

"The archeological diggings of the ruins of an ancient civilization. An archaeologist who has persevered at the digging is finally going to make a historic discovery. However, to open the door to the ruins, he needs the help of the descendant of Princess Luna. Momentously, the door is slowly opened. Dazzling light flashes through the door. Satan in the form of a huge monster comes out. Princess Luna is kidnapped in an instant. You have to rescue the Princess. Your mission is to fight the monsters and rescue the Princess using the "Anti-monster gun", equipped with a laser automatic tracking device, by driving all-around in the *BATTLE BLUSTER* which the professor prepared. The vehicle is ready. Let's move."[4]

Ride experience

Yokohama RailChase 3.png

Rail Chase: The Ride effectively acts as a real-life version of the titular arcade game, using turntables and basic target shooting elements to replicate its gameplay. Though differences exist between its three installations, the basic concept of Rail Chase: The Ride remains the same throughout each of of them, with its aim being to simulate the rescue of a captured princess through an obstacle-ridden environment. Riders can achieve this by participating in rudimentary infra-red target shooting areas.[2]

The ride makes use of six gun-equipped minecarts, each with a capacity of two people and a max speed of 25km/h.[2] To heighten immersion and enhance experience, various practical, lighting, sound, and visual effects are used throughout its three-minute duration, such as flashlights, basic animatronics/sculptures, and air.[2] Additions made to its latter two installations include an elevator and theming differences. The rotating turntable used in the attraction to replicate perspective shifts was stated to be the first used in a roller coaster.[2]

History

Development

For the opening of Sega's first full-scale venue under the Amusement Theme Park concept after its pilot launch with Osaka ATC Galbo, Sega's amusement R&D divisions, primarily AM5, began work on new large attractions that would suit the larger amount of space available.[5] Unlike other attractions developed up to that point in time by the company, a pre-existing arcade series, Rail Chase, was chosen as its basis, likely down to its minecart concept's convenience and adaptability to a traditional roller coaster.

Sega personnel involved with the creation of Rail Chase: The Ride included Hiroshi Uemura, Shingo Dote, and sound designer Hiroshi Kawaguchi.[6] Kawaguchi created an orchestral score for the attraction, utilising over 30 speakers and sensor boards to trigger different tracks.[6] Some aspects of the attraction were outsourced; Masago Industrial handled manufacturing,[7] and popular Japanese character designer Keita Amemiya was commissioned to make an original creation for the attraction's shooting portions.[2]

Release

Promotional material shot of second Tokyo Joypolis installation, circa July 1996

Rail Chase: The Ride first appeared at the July 20, 1994 opening day of Yokohama Joypolis.[8] Situated on the ground floor and one of the three premiere attractions that made their debuts at the park, it later received a minor theming and name update on July 8, 1995Template:Refhttps://web.archive.org/web/20010110215100/http://www.sega.co.jp:80/sega/atp/atc/railcr.html before closing alongside the park in February 2001.[9] Yokohama Joypolis is also notable for being namechecked in the credits of Rail Chase 2.

The attraction's second installation was opened two years later at launch of the second flagship Joypolis facility, Tokyo Joypolis.[10] For this version, the course and theming of the roller coaster was altered, now making use of an elevator alongside a turntable. In late 2000, the ride closed for renovations, and its space reopened at the start of December as the altered Speed Boarder roller coaster.[11]

Its final release and only appearance outside of Japan occurred at Sega World Sydney, opening alongside the facility in March 1997.[12] Aside from theming, it is believed to have initially resembled the original Yokohama version. In 2000, the ride was rethemed.[13] After its sale at auction after the November 2000 closure of the venue, it has remained the only installation of the ride to remain in operation at Indian resort Haailand.[3]

Locations

Venue Opened Closed
Yokohama Joypolis (1F) 1994-07-20[8] 2001-02-28
Tokyo Joypolis (3F) 1996-07-12[14] 2000
Sega World Sydney 1997-03-18 2000-11

Production credits

Source:
Uncredited


Patents

Photo gallery

Magazine articles

Main article: Rail Chase: The Ride/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

External links

References


Large attractions
Sega Super Circuit (1988) | CCD Cart (1990) | Cyber Dome (1990) | Ghost Hunters (1994) | Astronomicon (1994) | Virtual Shooting (1994) | VR-1 (1994) | Rail Chase: The Ride (1994) | Mad Bazooka (1994) | Aqua Nova (1996) | Halfpipe Canyon (1996) | Time Fall (1996) | Treasure Panic (1996) | The Crypt (1996) | Fortune Museum (1996) | Beast In Darkness (1996) | Weird Photo Studio (1996) | Sega Rally Special Stage (1996) | Super Ranking (1996) | Shocking Maze (1996) | Sega Touring Car Championship Special (1997) | Aquarena (1997) | Lost Cemetery (1997) | Drift Cart (1998) | Fortune Cave (1998) | Viva! Skydiving (2000) | Speed Boarder (2000) | Dark Chapel (2004) | Ikiningyou no Ma (2005) | Spin Bullet (2006) | Fortune Forest (2006) | Tsukutte Hashirou! Dekoboko Motors (2008) | Initial D Arcade Stage 4 Limited (2007) | Sonic Hopper! (2009) | Lola and Carla the Beauty Contest (No results?) | Dekoboko Crane Company (2011) | Veil Of Dark (2012) | Halfpipe Tokyo (2012) | Ace Attorney in Joypolis (No results?) | Sonic Ghost Shooting (2013) | Psycho-Pass The Shooting (201x) | Zero Latency VR (No results?) | VR Ikiningyou no Ma (2016) | Gekion Live Coaster (2016) | Psycho-Pass The Shooting 2 (2016)
Yokohama Joypolis

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Attractions at Yokohama Joypolis
2nd floor (2F) Ghost Hunters (1994 – 1995) | Mad Bazooka (1994 – 2001) | VR-1 (1994 – 2001) | Ghost Hunters II: Dokuga no Meikyuu (1995 – ) | Fortune Museum (1996 – 2001) | Murder Lodge (1996 – )
Mezzanine floor (M2F) The Lost World: Jurassic Park Special ( – )
1st floor (1F) IMAX Ridefilm ( – 2001) | MaxFlight VR2002 ( – ) | Power Sled ( – ) | AS-1 (1994 – ) | Rail Chase: The Ride (1994 – 2001) | SegaSonic & Tails (1994 – 2001) | Virtua Formula (1994 – ) | Indy Formula (199x – 2001)
Tokyo Joypolis

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Attractions at Tokyo Joypolis
3rd floor (5F) Chakushin Ari Final: Tokubetsu Hen ( – ) | Daiba Shashin-kan Mucha Puri ( – 2016) | Ikiningyou Ao no Ma ( – ) | Lola to Carla no Mijou Mensetsu ( – ) | Murder Lodge ( – ) | Mystery Walk ( – ) | Odaiba: Iikiningyou no Ma ( – ) | Pink Panther: Kieta Daiya no Yukue ( – 2011) | Ring 0: Ai to Kyoufu ( – ) | Yatterman: Inchiki Yeunchi, Doron Joypolis Koron! ( – ) | Zathura ( – ) | Beast In Darkness (1996 – ) | Fortune Museum (1996 – 2006) | The Crypt (1996 – ) | Treasure Panic (1996 – 200x) | Weird Photo Studio (1996 – ) | Lost Cemetery (1998 – ) | Terrors of America: Kyouki no Yakata (1998 – ) | 5 Senses Garden (1998 – ) | Terrors of America 2 (1999 – ) | Mad Street (1999 – ) | Ring: Ring Virus Kansen Tour (1999 – ) | The Ring: 3D Sound (1999 – ) | The Blair Witch Project (2000 – ) | Shisha no Gakuen-sai: 3D Sound (2000 – ) | Gekiryu: Wild River (2000 – ) | Gekisou: Wild Jungle (2000 – ) | Otogirisou (2000 – ) | Dark Gate (2001 – ) | Evolution (attraction) (2001 – ) | Juu Sanri Kyoufu no Bansan: featuring Morning Musume. (2001 – ) | Shinrei Shashin no Nazo: featuring Morning Musume. (2001 – ) | Men in Black 2 (2002 – 2003) | J-Pop Cafe Odaiba (2002 – 2012) | Dark Chapel (2004 – 2017) | Gekitobi: Wild Wing (2004 – ) | Van Helsing (2004 – 2005) | Chakushin Ari 2: Tokubetsu Hen (2004 – ) | Fortune Forest (2006 – ) | Wild Jungle Brothers (2006 – ) | Prison Break: Break Out (2007 – ) | Wild River: Splash! (2009 – ) | Gyakuten Kenji in Joypolis (2011 – 2015) | Unfair: The Attraction (2011 – ) | Another Shi e no Tobira.... (2012 – ) | Sadako 3D Noroi no Tour (2012 – ) | Frame Cafe (2012 – ) | Sadako 3D 2 Sadako no Ko (2013 – 2014) | Kisei Juu: Are you a Parasyte? (2014 – 2015) | Shi Juu Go Banme no Hanashi: Shi e no Sasoi (2014 – ) | Psycho-Pass The Shooting 2 (2014 – 2015) | Gyakuten Saiban in Joypolis (2015 – ) | Tokyo Ghoul: Deadly Escape (2015 – 2016) | Wild River The Treasure Hunt (2015 – ) | Zombie Zoo Zombie Shuuyousho Kengaku Tour (2015 – 2016) | Joypolis Sugoroku with Ensemble Stars! (2016 – 2018) | Sousaku Funou: Chikashitsu ni Nemuru Hikari no Hougyoku (2016 – 2018) | VR Ikiningyou no Ma (2016 – 2017) | Walk-through Attraction "Biohazard: Jaaku no Yakata" (2016 – 2018) | Yaoo Yashiki: Ou Edo Hyaku Oni Yakou Ki Tan (2017 – ) | Joypolis Sugoroku with Osomatsu-san (2018 – ) | Tokyo Goul: Re Caan Tane Hanzai Taisaku Seminar - Joypolis Ku no Wana (2018 – 2019) | Houzuki no Reitetsu: Rittai Onkyou Ibun (2019 – ) | Sadako: Noroi Uranai no Yakata (2019 – ) | Shingeki no Kyojin The Attraction: Ketsudan (2019 – ) | Tokyo Godzilla Museum (2020 – 2021) | Escape The Lost Pyramid (2021 – 2022) | Beyond Medusa's Gate (2022 – 2022) | DecoPOLIS (2023 – )
2nd floor (4F) Answer x Answer Live! Special ( – 2015) | Bike Athlon ( – ) | Burnout Running ( – 2013) | Cycraft ( – ) | The House of the Dead 4 Special ( – 2020) | The Lost World: Jurassic Park Special ( – ) | Power Sled (1996 – 2009) | Boat Race GP (1998 – ) | Aquarena (1999 – ) | Healing Area (2001 – 2004) | The Quiz Show (2005 – ) | OutRun 2 SP SDX (2007 – 2009) | Let's Go Jungle! Special (2007 – 2018) | Storm-G (2009 – ) | Hummer (2009 – ) | Sonic Athletics (2013 – ) | Sonic Brain Ranking (2013 – 2018) | Transformers Human Alliance Special (2015 – ) | Tower-Tag VR ESports (2018 – 2025) | House of the Dead: Scarlet Dawn The Attraction (2020 – )
1st floor (3F) FuturExpress ( – 2003) | Joypolis Tanken Tai Daiiba no Hihou to Nazo no Monshou ( – ) | Kyouryou King Dino Theater ( – 2008) | Spin Bullet ( – 2012) | Aqua Nova (1996 – ) | AS-1 (1996 – 2004) | Halfpipe Canyon (1996 – 2012) | Rail Chase: The Ride (1996 – 2000) | SegaSonic & Tails (1996 – 199x) | Time Fall (1996 – 2000) | JP Gear (1998 – ) | Kaseifu Obatan no Jikenbo: Tsubaki no Meikyuu (1998 – 1999) | Sky Cruising (1999 – 2013) | MaxFlight VR2002 (1999 – ) | Sega Touring Car Championship Special (1999 – ) | Speed Boarder (2000 – ) | Viva! Skydiving (2000 – 2005) | Initial D Arcade Stage 4 Limited (2007 – 2019) | 3D Movie Attraction: Sonic & Chip Kyoufu no Yakata (200x – 2017) | Halfpipe Tokyo (2012 – ) | Veil Of Dark (2012 – 2016) | Sonic Ghost Shooting (2013 – 2016) | Gekion Live Coaster (2016 – ) | Pirate's Plunder: Bloody Morgan no Takara (2017 – ) | Spicy Taxi (2019 – ) | Laser Shooting: Issen (2024 – )
Sega World Sydney

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Attractions at Sega World Sydney
Aqua Nova (1997 – ) | AS-1 (1997 – ) | Ghost Hunters (1997 – ) | Mad Bazooka (1997 – ) | Rail Chase: The Ride (1997 – 2000) | VR-1 (1997 – )