Difference between revisions of "Super Guru Guru Station"

From Sega Retro

 
Line 13: Line 13:
 
{{sub-stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' (スーパー・グルグル・ステーション) is a prize game released by [[Sega]] in late 2000. It is a large prize machine that can operated by several players at once; prizes around the cabinet travel on a conveyor belt (similar to a sushi restaurant), and is operated in real time by a member of staff, allowing for prizes to be restocked quickly.
 
{{sub-stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' (スーパー・グルグル・ステーション) is a prize game released by [[Sega]] in late 2000. It is a large prize machine that can operated by several players at once; prizes around the cabinet travel on a conveyor belt (similar to a sushi restaurant), and is operated in real time by a member of staff, allowing for prizes to be restocked quickly.
  
The cabinet's size and manning needs mean it is rarely seen in action today.
+
The cabinet's size and manning needs mean it is rarely seen in action today. [[Sega Logistics Service]] announced it would end service on the machines on March 31, 2017.{{fileref|SegaProductsTerminationAnnouncement 2016-11 JP.pdf}}{{fileref|SegaProductsTerminationAnnouncement 2016-12.pdf}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 01:06, 14 May 2024

n/a

SuperGuruGuruStation logo.png
SuperGuruGuruStation Prize Cabinet.jpg
Super Guru Guru Station
System(s): EX Board
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Genre: Prize

















Number of players: 1-2
Release Date RRP Code
Arcade (prize game)
JP
¥? ?




This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.


Super Guru Guru Station (スーパー・グルグル・ステーション) is a prize game released by Sega in late 2000. It is a large prize machine that can operated by several players at once; prizes around the cabinet travel on a conveyor belt (similar to a sushi restaurant), and is operated in real time by a member of staff, allowing for prizes to be restocked quickly.

The cabinet's size and manning needs mean it is rarely seen in action today. Sega Logistics Service announced it would end service on the machines on March 31, 2017.[2][3]

References



Games in the UFO Catcher Series
UFO Catcher (1985) | UFO Catcher DX (1987) | UFO Catcher DX II (1990) | New UFO Catcher (1991) | UFO Catcher Excellent (1994) | UFO Catcher 21 (1996) | UFO Catcher 7 (Max Edition | Second) (2001) | UFO Catcher 8 (Second) (2008) | UFO Catcher 9 (Second | Third) (2016) | UFO Catcher 10 (2023)
UFO Catcher Mini (1991) | UFO Catcher 800 (1998) | Baby UFO (1998) | (2004) | Sega UFO Catcher (2006) | UFO Colon (2007) | UFO Catcher Double (2009) | UFO Balance Catcher (2010) | UFO Catcher Triple (Twin | Second) (2017) | UFO Catcher Duet (2018)
Dream Catcher Games
Dream Catcher (1989) | Dream Catcher Re-dress (1999) | UFO Dream Catcher (2008)
Dream Palace Games
Dream Palace (1992) | Dream Palace II (199x) | Dream Palace 3 (unreleased)
UFO Á La Carte Games
UFO À La Carte (1996) | UFO À La Carte II (2002) | UFO À La Carte DX (2009) | UFO À La Carte 3 (2023)
Capto Crane Games
Capto Crane (2019) | Capto Crane MIDI (2023) | Capto Candy (2023)
Others
Dream Town (1990) | UFO Circus Land (1992) | UFO SegaSonic (1992) | School Kids (1993) | Dream Kitchen (1994) | Aqua Paradise (1995) | UFO Pusher (1995) | UFO Pusher Twin (1995) | Funky Dice (1996) | Prize Sensor (1998) | Paradise Carry (1996) | Super Guru Guru Station (2000) | UFO Prize Stage (2000) | Dream Throne (2002) | UFO Dream Town JP (2004)
Space Crane (1986) | Super Chance (1987) | Diga Mart (1984)
Spin-offs
CR UFO Catcher (1998) | UFO Catcher Ride (2001)