Difference between revisions of "Sega Amusements Europe"

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{{otherPage|desc=the earlier company|page=Sega Amusements Europe (1991)}}
 
{{CompanyBob
 
{{CompanyBob
 
| logo=Sega logo International R.svg
 
| logo=Sega logo International R.svg
| width=
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| headquartersdate=1997-03-01
| headquarters=London, United Kingdom
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| headquarters=Unit 2 Industrial Estate, Leigh Close, New Maiden, Surrey, KT3 3NL, United Kingdom
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| headquartersdate2=2002
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| headquarters2=Suite 3a, Oaks House, 12-22 West St., Epsom, Surrey, KT18 7RG, United Kingdom
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| headquartersdate3=2007
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| headquarters3=42 Barwell Business Park, Leatherhead Road, Chessington, Surrey, KT9 2NY, United Kingdom
 
| prevdate=1997-03-01
 
| prevdate=1997-03-01
 
| prev=[[Deith Leisure]]
 
| prev=[[Deith Leisure]]
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| next=[[Sega Amusements International]]
 
| next=[[Sega Amusements International]]
 
}}
 
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{{stub}}
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'''Sega Amusements Europe, Ltd.''' was a division within [[Sega]] that manufactured and distributed arcade games across Europe (and later Africa and Russia). The other half of "Sega Amusements", [[Sega Amusements USA]], focused on North and South America.
  
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This is technically the second incarnation of Sega Amusements Europe, having existed before March 1997 as [[Deith Leisure]], a company Sega had acquired in the early 1990s. Reorganisation of the Sega Europe Group around this time saw the "original" [[Sega Amusements Europe (1991)|Sega Amusements Europe]] become [[Sega ATP Europe]] (and its immediate successor becoming Sega Operations UK), with Deith Leisure officially adopting this company's prior name (though continued to trade as Deith Leisure, at least in the UK). Recycling the Sega Amusements Europe name gave the impression of continuity, and as both companies continued to operate from the same headquarters, very little actually changed.
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' was a division within [[Sega]] that focused primarily on arcade machines which they distribute around Europe (though they also cover Africa and Russia). The other half of Sega Amusements, [[Sega Amusements USA]], focused on North and South America.
 
  
 
Sega Amusements Europe were responsible for the [[Sega Europa-R]] hardware that powers ''[[Sega Rally 3]]'', and a number of other arcade cabinets, UFO catchers and slot machines. They are also responsible for distributing products made by smaller companies - Pan Amusements, Game Concepts, ICE, Andamiro, Fantasy Entertainment, Fusence, Quasimoto and String International. Sega Amusements Europe also manufactured products such as the [[Sega Vision]] and [[Sega Spe-x]] too.
 
Sega Amusements Europe were responsible for the [[Sega Europa-R]] hardware that powers ''[[Sega Rally 3]]'', and a number of other arcade cabinets, UFO catchers and slot machines. They are also responsible for distributing products made by smaller companies - Pan Amusements, Game Concepts, ICE, Andamiro, Fantasy Entertainment, Fusence, Quasimoto and String International. Sega Amusements Europe also manufactured products such as the [[Sega Vision]] and [[Sega Spe-x]] too.
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==Softography==
 
==Softography==
 
{{CompanyHistoryAll|Sega Amusements Europe}}
 
{{CompanyHistoryAll|Sega Amusements Europe}}
*''[[Ford Racing: Full Blown]]'' (2006)
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*''[[Sega Rally 3]]'' (2008)
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==List of staff==
*''[[GRID]]'' (2010)
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{{StaffList|Sega Amusements Europe|employees=yes}}
*''[[Dream Raiders]]'' (2012)
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*''[[Showdown Arcade]]'' (2014)
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==Catalogues==
 +
<gallery>
 +
SegaAmusements Catalogue EAG 2011.pdf|2011
 +
</gallery>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 21:28, 11 November 2024

For the earlier company, see Sega Amusements Europe (1991).

https://segaretro.org/images/7/76/Sega_logo_International_R.svg

Sega logo International R.svg
Sega Amusements Europe
Headquarters:
1997-03-01:  Unit 2 Industrial Estate, Leigh Close, New Maiden, Surrey, KT3 3NL, United Kingdom
2002:  Suite 3a, Oaks House, 12-22 West St., Epsom, Surrey, KT18 7RG, United Kingdom
2007:  42 Barwell Business Park, Leatherhead Road, Chessington, Surrey, KT9 2NY, United Kingdom
1997-03-01
2015-10-14

This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.


Sega Amusements Europe, Ltd. was a division within Sega that manufactured and distributed arcade games across Europe (and later Africa and Russia). The other half of "Sega Amusements", Sega Amusements USA, focused on North and South America.

This is technically the second incarnation of Sega Amusements Europe, having existed before March 1997 as Deith Leisure, a company Sega had acquired in the early 1990s. Reorganisation of the Sega Europe Group around this time saw the "original" Sega Amusements Europe become Sega ATP Europe (and its immediate successor becoming Sega Operations UK), with Deith Leisure officially adopting this company's prior name (though continued to trade as Deith Leisure, at least in the UK). Recycling the Sega Amusements Europe name gave the impression of continuity, and as both companies continued to operate from the same headquarters, very little actually changed.

Sega Amusements Europe were responsible for the Sega Europa-R hardware that powers Sega Rally 3, and a number of other arcade cabinets, UFO catchers and slot machines. They are also responsible for distributing products made by smaller companies - Pan Amusements, Game Concepts, ICE, Andamiro, Fantasy Entertainment, Fusence, Quasimoto and String International. Sega Amusements Europe also manufactured products such as the Sega Vision and Sega Spe-x too.

Working along with Sega Amusements Europe were Sega Total Solutions (responsible for the maintenance, technical assistance and spare parts for arcade machines) and Sega Prize Europe (responsible for stocking Sega UFO Catcher machines). Sega Amusments Europe also run the Sega Prize Zone and Sega Active Zone arcade chains.

Both Sega Amusements Europe and Sega Amusements USA were merged in 2015 to create Sega Amusements International.

Softography

List of staff

Catalogues

References


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