Sega Enterprises, Inc.

From Sega Retro

For the Japanese company by the same name, see Sega Enterprises, Ltd.. For the later company established in 1985, see Sega Enterprises USA.

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Sega logo International.svg
Sega Enterprises, Inc.
Founded: 1974[1]
Defunct: April 1984[2][3]
Headquarters:
2550 Santa Fe Avenue, Redondo Beach, California 90278, United States
2029 Century Park East, Los Angeles, California 90067, United States[4]

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Sega Enterprises, Inc. was the parent company of Sega Enterprises, Ltd. and Gremlin Industries. It was established by Gulf+Western and the first game it produced was Bullet Mark.[5]

SEI also traded as "Sega of America"[6][7][8], sold electro-mechanical arcade games, sold the Sega-Vision (as part of a short-lived home theater division), and was responsible for the licensing and publishing of home console and computer versions of Sega arcade titles.

The company purchased Gremlin Industries in 1978[9]. This company, eventually becoming "Sega Electronics" was sold to Bally Midway in 1983.

In April 1984 Sega's Japanese arm was purchased by a group of investors including Hayao Nakayama, David Rosen and Isao Okawa, becoming a subsidiary of CSK[2][10]. The remaining American Sega assets owned by Gulf+Western would then be absorbed; SEI became Simon & Schuster Entertainment Software, Inc. on March 18, 1985 before becoming a shell company, Ages Entertainment Software, Inc. on August 30 of the same year.[11]

SEI technically still exists as Ages Entertainment Software, having survived Gulf+Western's 1994 aquisition by Viacom and various corporate restructures. It remains a shell company as part of the Paramount Global empire, having not been involved in video games since the mid-1980s.

Sega would return to the North American market with a similar company, Sega Enterprises, Inc. (USA) (Sega Enterprises USA; SEU) in 1985.

Softography

Electro-mechanical arcade

Discrete logic arcade

VCO Object

Zaxxon hardware

G80

Atari 2600

Intellivision

ColecoVision

Atari 5200

Atari 8-bit family

Apple II

VIC-20

Commodore 64

Adam

IBM PC

BBC Micro

ZX Spectrum

Amstrad CPC

MSX

Softography (Arcade)

Electro-Mechanical/Discrete Logic

Softography (Consumer)

Apple II

Atari 2600

Atari 5200

Atari 8-bit

Commodore 64

List of staff

References

Early Sega
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Service Games Gulf+Western
Service Games, Hawaii & Nevada & Japan Nihon Goraku Bussan & Nihon Kikai Seizou Sega Enterprises, Inc.
Sega Enterprises, Ltd. Sega Ltd. & Gremlin Sega Ltd.