Difference between revisions of "Sega CS1 (1996-1999)"

From Sega Retro

 
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In May 1999, all of Sega's internal development divisions were renamed, with CS1 becoming [[Sega Software R&D Dept. 6]]. During this transition, many developers left Sega to join the new start-ups [[Artoon]] and [[Land Ho!]].
 
In May 1999, all of Sega's internal development divisions were renamed, with CS1 becoming [[Sega Software R&D Dept. 6]]. During this transition, many developers left Sega to join the new start-ups [[Artoon]] and [[Land Ho!]].
 
==Members==
 
 
{{multicol|
 
*[[Akihiko Mukaiyama]]
 
*[[Atsuhiko Nakamura]]
 
*[[Hiroshi Aso]]
 
*[[Koichi Nagata]]
 
*[[Makoto Oshitani]]
 
*[[Osamu Sato]]
 
*[[Satoshi Sakai]]
 
*[[Shuichi Katagi]]
 
*[[Takaya Segawa]]
 
*[[Tetsuo Shinyu]]
 
*[[Tatsuo Yamada]]
 
*[[Tomohiro Kondo]]
 
*[[Yoji Ishii]]
 
*[[Yojiro Ogawa]]
 
*[[Youichi Shimosato]]
 
*[[Yukio Futatsugi]]
 
|cols=4}}
 
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==

Latest revision as of 17:08, 8 November 2024

Notavailable.svg
Sega CS1 (1996-1999)
Division of Sega Enterprises
Founded: 1996-04-01
Defunct: 1999-05
Headquarters:
Japan
1996-04-01
1999-05-11

Sega Consumer Research and Development Dept. #1 (Sega CS1) was a video game research and development division within Sega, following Sega Planning Design Production Dept. and Sega Software R&D Dept.[1]. As the name suggests, it was the first "consumer"-specific R&D department created by Sega of Japan, acting as a loose successor to the previous Sega CS1. It was officially founded in April 1996 and headed by Koichi Nagata,[2] replaced Makoto Oshitani a few years later.[3]

The studio garnered various members from people who worked on Panzer Dragoon, sports games, 32X titles, and also developers who worked on 8-Bit conversion of titles for the Master System and Game Gear.

By early 1998, when all the studio's efforts were dedicated to Sega Saturn titles, it could be divided into 3 mostly distinct groups: those who worked on the Shinseiki Evangelion series, sports game developers and Team Andromeda (which developed on the Panzer Dragoon series).[4]

In May 1999, all of Sega's internal development divisions were renamed, with CS1 becoming Sega Software R&D Dept. 6. During this transition, many developers left Sega to join the new start-ups Artoon and Land Ho!.

Softography



List of staff

Magazine articles

Main article: Sega CS1 (1996-1999)/Magazine articles.

References


Timeline of Sega of Japan research and development divisions








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