Difference between revisions of "Sega of America"
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+ | {{otherPage|desc=the company that traded as Sega of America between 1974 and 1984|page=Sega Enterprises, Inc.}} | ||
{{CompanyBob | {{CompanyBob | ||
| logo=Sega logo International R.svg | | logo=Sega logo International R.svg | ||
− | |||
| founded=1986-03-10<ref>California Business Search: Entity [https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/CBS/SearchResults?filing=&SearchType=NUMBER&SearchCriteria=C1299989 #C1299989]</ref>{{magref|sv|11|81}} | defunct= | | founded=1986-03-10<ref>California Business Search: Entity [https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/CBS/SearchResults?filing=&SearchType=NUMBER&SearchCriteria=C1299989 #C1299989]</ref>{{magref|sv|11|81}} | defunct= | ||
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| mergedwith= | | mergedwith= | ||
| mergedinto= | | mergedinto= | ||
− | | headquarters=[[wikipedia:Irvine, California|Irvine, California, United States | + | | headquartersdate=1986 |
+ | | headquarters=2149 Paragon Drive, San Jose, California 95131, United States | ||
+ | | headquartersdate2=1986 | ||
+ | | headquarters2=573 Forbes Blvd., So. San Francisco, California, 94080, United States{{fileref|SummerCES1991 Directory.pdf|page=269}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | | headquarters3=255 Shoreline Drive, [[wikipedia:Redwood City, California|Redwood City]], California 94065, United States | ||
+ | |||
+ | | headquarters4=650 Townsend Street, Suite 650, San Francisco, California, 94103, United States{{fileref|E32001 Directory.pdf|page=103}} | ||
+ | | headquartersdate5=2015 | ||
+ | | headquarters5=6400 Oak Canyon, Suite 100, [[wikipedia:Irvine, California|Irvine]], California 92618, United States | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | + | '''Sega of America, Inc.''' is the American branch of video game developer [[Sega]]. | |
==History== | ==History== | ||
===Pre-1986=== | ===Pre-1986=== | ||
+ | [[File:SoA employees.png|thumb|right|280px|An group photograph of Sega of America's employees, taken during its early years.]] | ||
Sega has technically had a presence in the United States ever since its [[History of Sega|1946 inception]] as an American entity, but it was it’s later Japanese incarnation [[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.]] that would grow to see actual success. Acquired by [[Gulf+Western]] in 1969, the purchase allowed the company to expand into the American market in 1974 with the establishment of [[Sega Enterprises, Inc.]] in [[wiki:Los Angeles|Los Angeles, California]]. Initially importing Japanese games while producing games of their own (and even a [[Sega-Vision|consumer television]]), this American branch also traded under the name “Sega of America” for the next decade. | Sega has technically had a presence in the United States ever since its [[History of Sega|1946 inception]] as an American entity, but it was it’s later Japanese incarnation [[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.]] that would grow to see actual success. Acquired by [[Gulf+Western]] in 1969, the purchase allowed the company to expand into the American market in 1974 with the establishment of [[Sega Enterprises, Inc.]] in [[wiki:Los Angeles|Los Angeles, California]]. Initially importing Japanese games while producing games of their own (and even a [[Sega-Vision|consumer television]]), this American branch also traded under the name “Sega of America” for the next decade. | ||
Eager to expand [[Sega]]’s newfound presence in the United States, the company acquired American arcade developer [[Gremlin Industries]] to become [[Gremlin/Sega]], and with the increased production capability was able to steadily establish itself in the arcades of the early 1980s. It also began to develop arcade ports for the fledgling home market, with games being released on the [[Atari VCS]], home computers, and other platforms. Renaming itself [[Sega Electronics]] in 1982, the division continued to produce games up until its assets were purchased by arcade manufacturer [[Bally Midway]] the next year. | Eager to expand [[Sega]]’s newfound presence in the United States, the company acquired American arcade developer [[Gremlin Industries]] to become [[Gremlin/Sega]], and with the increased production capability was able to steadily establish itself in the arcades of the early 1980s. It also began to develop arcade ports for the fledgling home market, with games being released on the [[Atari VCS]], home computers, and other platforms. Renaming itself [[Sega Electronics]] in 1982, the division continued to produce games up until its assets were purchased by arcade manufacturer [[Bally Midway]] the next year. | ||
− | Later seeking to rejoin the American market, [[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.]] would established two new American subsidiaries: [[Sega Enterprises, Inc.]]<ref name="cbse"/> on March 21, 1985 to again distribute its arcade games in the West, and '''Sega of America, Inc.''' on March 10, 1986<ref>California Business Search: Entity [https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/CBS/SearchResults?filing=&SearchType=NUMBER&SearchCriteria=C1299989 #C1299989]</ref>{{magref|sv|11|81}} to assist with consumer products like the upcoming [[Sega Master System]]. The two subsidiaries co-existed for several years and both had [[wiki:San Francisco Bay Area|San Francisco Bay Area]] offices closely nearby another. | + | Later seeking to rejoin the American market, [[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.]] would established two new American subsidiaries: [[Sega Enterprises USA|Sega Enterprises, Inc. (U.S.A.)]]<ref name="cbse"/> on March 21, 1985 to again distribute its arcade games in the West, and '''Sega of America, Inc.''' on March 10, 1986<ref>California Business Search: Entity [https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/CBS/SearchResults?filing=&SearchType=NUMBER&SearchCriteria=C1299989 #C1299989]</ref>{{magref|sv|11|81}} to assist with consumer products like the upcoming [[Sega Master System]]. The two subsidiaries co-existed for several years and both had [[wiki:San Francisco Bay Area|San Francisco Bay Area]] offices closely nearby another. |
===Tonka and the Master System=== | ===Tonka and the Master System=== | ||
− | In late 1987 '''Sega of America''' partnered with [[Tonka]] to market and distribute their recently-launched (and poor selling) [[Sega Master System]]. Tonka’s knowledge of the American toy market was seen as highly valuable, and the joint venture exceeded expectations in turning around ailing | + | In late 1987 '''Sega of America''' partnered with [[Tonka]] to market and distribute their recently-launched (and poor selling) [[Sega Master System]]. Tonka’s knowledge of the American toy market was seen as highly valuable, and the joint venture exceeded expectations in turning around ailing Master System sales. While Sega of America choose not to continue this partnership, the experience it gained in the home console market would prove indespensable. |
At this time, the American branch served mainly as a channel for bringing games to the West, and as a result Sega’s first home console saw little third-party support. Although sporting a library of quality Sega-produced titles, the console was unable to effectively establish itself in a market dominated by the wildly-popular [[wiki:Nintendo Entertainment System|Nintendo Entertainment System]]. Nearing the launch of what was now [[Sega of Japan]]’s upcoming [[Sega Mega Drive|16-bit machine]], American executives identified what they believed to be holding the company back, and what changes would be necessary, for eventually taking on Nintendo’s monopoly of the home market. Above all however, it was felt that the American market needed games tailored for American tastes; a philosophy would be at the heart of much of Sega of America’s methodology. Instead of waiting for the production of Japanese software, only to have to further localize them, Sega of America could establish in-house game development and produce software domestically. | At this time, the American branch served mainly as a channel for bringing games to the West, and as a result Sega’s first home console saw little third-party support. Although sporting a library of quality Sega-produced titles, the console was unable to effectively establish itself in a market dominated by the wildly-popular [[wiki:Nintendo Entertainment System|Nintendo Entertainment System]]. Nearing the launch of what was now [[Sega of Japan]]’s upcoming [[Sega Mega Drive|16-bit machine]], American executives identified what they believed to be holding the company back, and what changes would be necessary, for eventually taking on Nintendo’s monopoly of the home market. Above all however, it was felt that the American market needed games tailored for American tastes; a philosophy would be at the heart of much of Sega of America’s methodology. Instead of waiting for the production of Japanese software, only to have to further localize them, Sega of America could establish in-house game development and produce software domestically. | ||
− | While the company prepared for the release of the [[Sega Genesis]], newly-hired Director of Product Development [[Ken Balthaser]] realized many of these domestic productions would not be ready by the system’s launch. It was decided that Sega of America would contract third-party developers in the United States and Europe to ensure the | + | [[File:SegaofAmerica ProductDevelopmentTeam 3.png|thumb|left|280px|Sega's [[Product Development Team]] ensured the launch of the [[Genesis]] would be strong enough to challenge [[Nintendo]]'s monopoly.]] |
+ | While the company prepared for the release of the [[Sega Genesis]], newly-hired Director of Product Development [[Ken Balthaser]] realized many of these domestic productions would not be ready by the system’s launch. It was decided that Sega of America would contract third-party developers in the United States and Europe to ensure the Genesis launched with games tailored to American tastes. Externally-developed games would be supervised by a Sega of America producer who would coordinate between the two companies, with games often being conceptualized and seen to completion by the same producer. | ||
− | ===Genesis Does | + | A strong showing of quality sports games was also deemed as crucial to breaking through to the Western market, and together with the upcoming machine being leagues above what the Nintendo Entertainment System could currently provide, Sega of America was finally ready to introduce North America to the next generation. And it needed to show consumers that a geared-up competitor had finally arrived; one that could dethrone Nintendo. |
+ | {{clear}} | ||
+ | ===Genesis Does=== | ||
The 1989 launch of the North American [[Sega Genesis]] was overwhelmingly successful. While supported by a quality game library of foreign and domestic games (some featuring something novel - celebrity endorsements), the Genesis most strongly banked on its clever marketing to demonstrate the machine’s superiority over the existing [[wiki:Nintendo Entertainment System|Nintendo Entertainment System]]. Most notable was the 1990 ad campaign [[Genesis Does]]. Created by advertising agency Bozell, it was an instant hit with both Sega executives and the American public. With a tagline of “Genesis Does What Nintendon’t”, the campaign produced a stunning commercial featuring numerous celebrities, shots of colorful games, and a catchy accompanying song featuring the line “You can’t do this on Nintendo.” Many began to see Sega as not just the first real competitor to Nintendo, but as the next step entirely. | The 1989 launch of the North American [[Sega Genesis]] was overwhelmingly successful. While supported by a quality game library of foreign and domestic games (some featuring something novel - celebrity endorsements), the Genesis most strongly banked on its clever marketing to demonstrate the machine’s superiority over the existing [[wiki:Nintendo Entertainment System|Nintendo Entertainment System]]. Most notable was the 1990 ad campaign [[Genesis Does]]. Created by advertising agency Bozell, it was an instant hit with both Sega executives and the American public. With a tagline of “Genesis Does What Nintendon’t”, the campaign produced a stunning commercial featuring numerous celebrities, shots of colorful games, and a catchy accompanying song featuring the line “You can’t do this on Nintendo.” Many began to see Sega as not just the first real competitor to Nintendo, but as the next step entirely. | ||
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Sega of America would later establish the [[Videogame Rating Council]] rating system for its games in the summer of 1993. Created in response to [[Mortal Kombat]]’s Sega Genesis release to further differentiate mature themes in its games, the system would directly influence the design of the industry-wide [[wikipedia:Entertainment Software Rating Board|Entertainment Software Rating Board]] created the following year. | Sega of America would later establish the [[Videogame Rating Council]] rating system for its games in the summer of 1993. Created in response to [[Mortal Kombat]]’s Sega Genesis release to further differentiate mature themes in its games, the system would directly influence the design of the industry-wide [[wikipedia:Entertainment Software Rating Board|Entertainment Software Rating Board]] created the following year. | ||
− | ===32-bit | + | ===32-bit era=== |
The [[Sega 32X|Sega Super 32X]] was originally designed as a standalone console to replace the [[Sega Mega Drive]]. In Japan, that platform was not as popular as had been hoped, and a more-modern but still backward-compatible system seemed more feasible. In the United States however, the [[Sega Genesis]] had a significant market share and was already installed in millions of American homes. Sega of America reasoned that to ask those consumers to replace their systems entirely was unfeasible, and the end result of these discussions was the [[Sega 32X|Sega Super 32X]]’s redesign as a peripherial for existing [[Sega Mega Drive]] hardware. | The [[Sega 32X|Sega Super 32X]] was originally designed as a standalone console to replace the [[Sega Mega Drive]]. In Japan, that platform was not as popular as had been hoped, and a more-modern but still backward-compatible system seemed more feasible. In the United States however, the [[Sega Genesis]] had a significant market share and was already installed in millions of American homes. Sega of America reasoned that to ask those consumers to replace their systems entirely was unfeasible, and the end result of these discussions was the [[Sega 32X|Sega Super 32X]]’s redesign as a peripherial for existing [[Sega Mega Drive]] hardware. | ||
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Struggles selling the [[Sega Saturn]] in North America led to a scaling back of internal production and consolidation of many of Sega of America’s development teams. | Struggles selling the [[Sega Saturn]] in North America led to a scaling back of internal production and consolidation of many of Sega of America’s development teams. | ||
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===Post-2001=== | ===Post-2001=== | ||
− | Beginning in 2005, Sega of America underwent a string of wide restructurings. Sister company [[Sega Enterprises, Inc.]] merged with the company on April 1, 2008<ref name="cbse"/>. The resulting company retained the name Sega of America. | + | Beginning in 2005, Sega of America underwent a string of wide restructurings. Sister company [[Sega Enterprises USA|Sega Enterprises, Inc.]] merged with the company on April 1, 2008<ref name="cbse"/>. The resulting company retained the name Sega of America. |
After a 2015 evaluation of the company’s future, it saw further downsizing, and relocated from its [[wikipedia:San Francisco, California|San Francisco, California]] office to one in [[wikipedia:Irvine, California|Irvine, California]]. Now sharing offices with the [[Sega]]-owned [[Atlus USA]], both companies are primarily focused on localization and licensing. | After a 2015 evaluation of the company’s future, it saw further downsizing, and relocated from its [[wikipedia:San Francisco, California|San Francisco, California]] office to one in [[wikipedia:Irvine, California|Irvine, California]]. Now sharing offices with the [[Sega]]-owned [[Atlus USA]], both companies are primarily focused on localization and licensing. | ||
− | An additional office dedicated to handling the [[sonic:Sonic the Hedgehog|Sonic the Hedgehog]] franchise exists in [[wikipedia:Burbank, California|Burbank, California]]. The office, and its team, go by the title [[Sonic | + | An additional office dedicated to handling the [[sonic:Sonic the Hedgehog|Sonic the Hedgehog]] franchise exists in [[wikipedia:Burbank, California|Burbank, California]]. The office, and its team, go by the title [[Sonic Studio]]. |
==Softography== | ==Softography== | ||
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=== [[Mega Drive]] === | === [[Mega Drive]] === | ||
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* ''[[Ariel the Little Mermaid]]'' (1992) | * ''[[Ariel the Little Mermaid]]'' (1992) | ||
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* ''[[Dungeons & Dragons: Warriors of the Eternal Sun]]'' (1992) | * ''[[Dungeons & Dragons: Warriors of the Eternal Sun]]'' (1992) | ||
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* ''[[Menacer 6-Game Cartridge]]'' (1992) | * ''[[Menacer 6-Game Cartridge]]'' (1992) | ||
* ''[[TaleSpin]]'' (1992) | * ''[[TaleSpin]]'' (1992) | ||
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* ''[[NFL Football '94 Starring Joe Montana]]'' (1993) | * ''[[NFL Football '94 Starring Joe Montana]]'' (1993) | ||
* ''[[Richard Scarry's Busytown]]'' (1993) | * ''[[Richard Scarry's Busytown]]'' (1993) | ||
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* ''[[ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron]]'' (1993) | * ''[[ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron]]'' (1993) | ||
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* ''[[Jurassic Park: Rampage Edition]]'' (1994) | * ''[[Jurassic Park: Rampage Edition]]'' (1994) | ||
* ''[[Shadowrun]]'' (1994) | * ''[[Shadowrun]]'' (1994) | ||
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* ''[[The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles]]'' (1994) | * ''[[The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles]]'' (1994) | ||
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* ''[[World Series Baseball]]'' (1994) | * ''[[World Series Baseball]]'' (1994) | ||
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* ''[[Ecco Jr.]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Ecco Jr.]]'' (1995) | ||
− | * ''[[Striker]]'' (1995) | + | * ''[[Striker (Mega Drive)|Striker]]'' (1995) |
* ''[[The Adventures of Batman & Robin]]'' (1995) | * ''[[The Adventures of Batman & Robin]]'' (1995) | ||
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* ''[[Vectorman]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Vectorman]]'' (1995) | ||
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* ''[[Vectorman 2]]'' (1996) | * ''[[Vectorman 2]]'' (1996) | ||
* ''[[The Lost World: Jurassic Park]]'' (1997) | * ''[[The Lost World: Jurassic Park]]'' (1997) | ||
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=== [[Game Gear]] === | === [[Game Gear]] === | ||
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* ''[[Joe Montana Football]]'' (1991) | * ''[[Joe Montana Football]]'' (1991) | ||
* ''[[Ariel the Little Mermaid]]'' (1992) | * ''[[Ariel the Little Mermaid]]'' (1992) | ||
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* ''[[Home Alone]]'' (1993) | * ''[[Home Alone]]'' (1993) | ||
* ''[[Sonic Spinball]]'' (1993) | * ''[[Sonic Spinball]]'' (1993) | ||
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=== [[Sega CD]] === | === [[Sega CD]] === | ||
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* ''[[Ecco the Dolphin]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Ecco the Dolphin]]'' (1995) | ||
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* ''[[Eternal Champions: Challenge from the Dark Side]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Eternal Champions: Challenge from the Dark Side]]'' (1995) | ||
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=== [[Sega 32X]] === | === [[Sega 32X]] === | ||
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* ''[[Space Harrier]]'' (1994) | * ''[[Space Harrier]]'' (1994) | ||
* ''[[Star Wars Arcade]]'' (1994) | * ''[[Star Wars Arcade]]'' (1994) | ||
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* ''[[Virtua Fighter]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Virtua Fighter]]'' (1995) | ||
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=== [[Sega Saturn]] === | === [[Sega Saturn]] === | ||
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* ''[[Bug!]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Bug!]]'' (1995) | ||
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* ''[[Die Hard Arcade]]'' (1996) | * ''[[Die Hard Arcade]]'' (1996) | ||
* ''[[Three Dirty Dwarves]]'' (1996) | * ''[[Three Dirty Dwarves]]'' (1996) | ||
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* ''[[Bug Too!]]'' (1997) | * ''[[Bug Too!]]'' (1997) | ||
* ''[[Manx TT Super Bike]]'' (1997) | * ''[[Manx TT Super Bike]]'' (1997) | ||
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* ''[[Scud: The Disposable Assassin]]'' (1997) | * ''[[Scud: The Disposable Assassin]]'' (1997) | ||
* ''[[Sky Target]]'' (1997) | * ''[[Sky Target]]'' (1997) | ||
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* ''[[Floigan Bros. Episode 1]]'' (2001) | * ''[[Floigan Bros. Episode 1]]'' (2001) | ||
* ''[[Headhunter]]'' (2001) | * ''[[Headhunter]]'' (2001) | ||
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* ''[[NCAA College Football 2K2]]'' (2001) | * ''[[NCAA College Football 2K2]]'' (2001) | ||
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* ''[[Ecco the Dolphin: Defender of the Future]]'' (2001) | * ''[[Ecco the Dolphin: Defender of the Future]]'' (2001) | ||
* ''[[Ooga Booga]]'' (2001) | * ''[[Ooga Booga]]'' (2001) | ||
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===[[PlayStation 2]] === | ===[[PlayStation 2]] === | ||
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* ''[[Ecco the Dolphin: Defender of the Future]]'' (2001) | * ''[[Ecco the Dolphin: Defender of the Future]]'' (2001) | ||
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=== [[GameBoy Advance]] === | === [[GameBoy Advance]] === | ||
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* ''[[Altered Beast: Guardian of the Realms]]'' (2002) | * ''[[Altered Beast: Guardian of the Realms]]'' (2002) | ||
* ''[[Phantasy Star Collection]]'' (2002) | * ''[[Phantasy Star Collection]]'' (2002) | ||
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* ''[[Crazy Taxi: Catch a Ride]]'' (2003) | * ''[[Crazy Taxi: Catch a Ride]]'' (2003) | ||
* ''[[Jet Set Radio (Game Boy Advance)]]'' (2003) | * ''[[Jet Set Radio (Game Boy Advance)]]'' (2003) | ||
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=== [[Xbox 360]] === | === [[Xbox 360]] === | ||
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* ''[[Condemned 2: Bloodshot]]'' (2008) | * ''[[Condemned 2: Bloodshot]]'' (2008) | ||
* ''[[Golden Axe: Beast Rider]]'' (2008) | * ''[[Golden Axe: Beast Rider]]'' (2008) | ||
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* ''[[Universe at War: Earth Assault]]'' (2008) | * ''[[Universe at War: Earth Assault]]'' (2008) | ||
* ''[[Sega Mega Drive Ultimate Collection]]'' (2009) | * ''[[Sega Mega Drive Ultimate Collection]]'' (2009) | ||
* ''[[Aliens vs. Predator]]'' (2010) | * ''[[Aliens vs. Predator]]'' (2010) | ||
* ''[[Alpha Protocol]]'' (2010) | * ''[[Alpha Protocol]]'' (2010) | ||
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* ''[[Aliens: Colonial Marines]]'' (2013) | * ''[[Aliens: Colonial Marines]]'' (2013) | ||
* ''[[The Cave]]'' (2013) | * ''[[The Cave]]'' (2013) | ||
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=== [[PlayStation 3]] === | === [[PlayStation 3]] === | ||
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* ''[[Condemned 2: Bloodshot]]'' (2008) | * ''[[Condemned 2: Bloodshot]]'' (2008) | ||
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=== [[Wii U]] === | === [[Wii U]] === | ||
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* ''[[The Cave]]'' (2013) | * ''[[The Cave]]'' (2013) | ||
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=== [[Xbox One]] === | === [[Xbox One]] === | ||
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* ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | * ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | ||
=== [[PlayStation 4]] === | === [[PlayStation 4]] === | ||
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* ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | * ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | ||
=== [[Nintendo Switch]] === | === [[Nintendo Switch]] === | ||
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* ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | * ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | ||
=== [[PC]] === | === [[PC]] === | ||
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{{multicol| | {{multicol| | ||
* ''[[Tomcat Alley]]'' (1995) | * ''[[Tomcat Alley]]'' (1995) | ||
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* ''[[The Matrix Online]]'' (2005) | * ''[[The Matrix Online]]'' (2005) | ||
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* ''[[Space Siege]]'' (2008) | * ''[[Space Siege]]'' (2008) | ||
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* ''[[Universe at War: Earth Assault]]'' (2008) | * ''[[Universe at War: Earth Assault]]'' (2008) | ||
* ''[[Alpha Protocol]]'' (2010) | * ''[[Alpha Protocol]]'' (2010) | ||
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* ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | * ''[[Sonic Mania]]'' (2017) | ||
|cols=2}} | |cols=2}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Photo gallery== | ||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | SoA devs sportsgame.png | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==External links== | ||
+ | *[http://www.sega.com Official Website] | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
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{{clear}} | {{clear}} | ||
{{SegaOverseas}} | {{SegaOverseas}} |
Latest revision as of 03:37, 13 November 2024
- For the company that traded as Sega of America between 1974 and 1984, see Sega Enterprises, Inc..
Sega of America | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Founded: 1986-03-10[1][2] | ||||||||||
Headquarters:
|
Sega of America, Inc. is the American branch of video game developer Sega.
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Softography
- 2.1 Master System
- 2.2 Mega Drive
- 2.3 Game Gear
- 2.4 Mega-CD
- 2.5 32X
- 2.6 Mega-CD 32X
- 2.7 Commodore 64
- 2.8 IBM PC
- 2.9 Amiga
- 2.10 Pico
- 2.11 Saturn
- 2.12 Dreamcast
- 2.13 Game Boy Advance
- 2.14 PlayStation 2
- 2.15 GameCube
- 2.16 Xbox
- 2.17 N-Gage
- 2.18 Nintendo DS
- 2.19 PlayStation Portable
- 2.20 Xbox 360
- 2.21 PlayStation 3
- 2.22 Wii
- 2.23 Nintendo 3DS
- 2.24 PlayStation Vita
- 2.25 Wii U
- 2.26 PlayStation 4
- 2.27 Xbox One
- 2.28 PlayStation Now
- 2.29 Nintendo Switch
- 2.30 Nintendo Switch Online
- 2.31 Windows PC
- 2.32 Steam
- 2.33 Palm OS
- 2.34 Android
- 2.35 iOS
- 2.36 LCD
- 2.37 Master System
- 2.38 Mega Drive
- 2.39 Game Gear
- 2.40 Sega CD
- 2.41 Sega 32X
- 2.42 Sega Saturn
- 2.43 Dreamcast
- 2.44 PlayStation 2
- 2.45 GameBoy Advance
- 2.46 Xbox 360
- 2.47 PlayStation 3
- 2.48 Wii U
- 2.49 Xbox One
- 2.50 PlayStation 4
- 2.51 Nintendo Switch
- 2.52 PC
- 3 Photo gallery
- 4 External links
- 5 References
History
Pre-1986
Sega has technically had a presence in the United States ever since its 1946 inception as an American entity, but it was it’s later Japanese incarnation Sega Enterprises, Ltd. that would grow to see actual success. Acquired by Gulf+Western in 1969, the purchase allowed the company to expand into the American market in 1974 with the establishment of Sega Enterprises, Inc. in Los Angeles, California. Initially importing Japanese games while producing games of their own (and even a consumer television), this American branch also traded under the name “Sega of America” for the next decade.
Eager to expand Sega’s newfound presence in the United States, the company acquired American arcade developer Gremlin Industries to become Gremlin/Sega, and with the increased production capability was able to steadily establish itself in the arcades of the early 1980s. It also began to develop arcade ports for the fledgling home market, with games being released on the Atari VCS, home computers, and other platforms. Renaming itself Sega Electronics in 1982, the division continued to produce games up until its assets were purchased by arcade manufacturer Bally Midway the next year.
Later seeking to rejoin the American market, Sega Enterprises, Ltd. would established two new American subsidiaries: Sega Enterprises, Inc. (U.S.A.)[5] on March 21, 1985 to again distribute its arcade games in the West, and Sega of America, Inc. on March 10, 1986[6][2] to assist with consumer products like the upcoming Sega Master System. The two subsidiaries co-existed for several years and both had San Francisco Bay Area offices closely nearby another.
Tonka and the Master System
In late 1987 Sega of America partnered with Tonka to market and distribute their recently-launched (and poor selling) Sega Master System. Tonka’s knowledge of the American toy market was seen as highly valuable, and the joint venture exceeded expectations in turning around ailing Master System sales. While Sega of America choose not to continue this partnership, the experience it gained in the home console market would prove indespensable.
At this time, the American branch served mainly as a channel for bringing games to the West, and as a result Sega’s first home console saw little third-party support. Although sporting a library of quality Sega-produced titles, the console was unable to effectively establish itself in a market dominated by the wildly-popular Nintendo Entertainment System. Nearing the launch of what was now Sega of Japan’s upcoming 16-bit machine, American executives identified what they believed to be holding the company back, and what changes would be necessary, for eventually taking on Nintendo’s monopoly of the home market. Above all however, it was felt that the American market needed games tailored for American tastes; a philosophy would be at the heart of much of Sega of America’s methodology. Instead of waiting for the production of Japanese software, only to have to further localize them, Sega of America could establish in-house game development and produce software domestically.
While the company prepared for the release of the Sega Genesis, newly-hired Director of Product Development Ken Balthaser realized many of these domestic productions would not be ready by the system’s launch. It was decided that Sega of America would contract third-party developers in the United States and Europe to ensure the Genesis launched with games tailored to American tastes. Externally-developed games would be supervised by a Sega of America producer who would coordinate between the two companies, with games often being conceptualized and seen to completion by the same producer.
A strong showing of quality sports games was also deemed as crucial to breaking through to the Western market, and together with the upcoming machine being leagues above what the Nintendo Entertainment System could currently provide, Sega of America was finally ready to introduce North America to the next generation. And it needed to show consumers that a geared-up competitor had finally arrived; one that could dethrone Nintendo.
Genesis Does
The 1989 launch of the North American Sega Genesis was overwhelmingly successful. While supported by a quality game library of foreign and domestic games (some featuring something novel - celebrity endorsements), the Genesis most strongly banked on its clever marketing to demonstrate the machine’s superiority over the existing Nintendo Entertainment System. Most notable was the 1990 ad campaign Genesis Does. Created by advertising agency Bozell, it was an instant hit with both Sega executives and the American public. With a tagline of “Genesis Does What Nintendon’t”, the campaign produced a stunning commercial featuring numerous celebrities, shots of colorful games, and a catchy accompanying song featuring the line “You can’t do this on Nintendo.” Many began to see Sega as not just the first real competitor to Nintendo, but as the next step entirely.
Suddenly, Sega of America had created a corporate image for themselves, but one framed by Nintendo: Sega was the cool, cutting-edge company that makes games for cool older American kids, and Nintendo was the safe, slow rival. With the arrival of Sonic the Hedgehog, the continued success of the Sega Genesis against the Nintendo juggernaut was all but assured, and while this corporate image would grow less appealing as more forced attitude was used, it showed that Sega was willing to focus everything in its power to show it was the true “anti-Nintendo.”
Sega of America would later establish the Videogame Rating Council rating system for its games in the summer of 1993. Created in response to Mortal Kombat’s Sega Genesis release to further differentiate mature themes in its games, the system would directly influence the design of the industry-wide Entertainment Software Rating Board created the following year.
32-bit era
The Sega Super 32X was originally designed as a standalone console to replace the Sega Mega Drive. In Japan, that platform was not as popular as had been hoped, and a more-modern but still backward-compatible system seemed more feasible. In the United States however, the Sega Genesis had a significant market share and was already installed in millions of American homes. Sega of America reasoned that to ask those consumers to replace their systems entirely was unfeasible, and the end result of these discussions was the Sega Super 32X’s redesign as a peripherial for existing Sega Mega Drive hardware.
Struggles selling the Sega Saturn in North America led to a scaling back of internal production and consolidation of many of Sega of America’s development teams.
Post-2001
Beginning in 2005, Sega of America underwent a string of wide restructurings. Sister company Sega Enterprises, Inc. merged with the company on April 1, 2008[5]. The resulting company retained the name Sega of America.
After a 2015 evaluation of the company’s future, it saw further downsizing, and relocated from its San Francisco, California office to one in Irvine, California. Now sharing offices with the Sega-owned Atlus USA, both companies are primarily focused on localization and licensing.
An additional office dedicated to handling the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise exists in Burbank, California. The office, and its team, go by the title Sonic Studio.
Softography
Master System
- Marksman Shooting & Trap Shooting (1986)
- Rambo: First Blood Part II (1986)
- Sports Pad Football (1987)
- ALF (1989)
- Paperboy (1990)
- Dick Tracy (1991)
- Spider-Man vs. The Kingpin (1991)
- Pat Riley Basketball (unreleased)
- Sonic's Edusoft (unreleased)
Mega Drive
- Space Harrier II (1988)
- Thunder Force II (1989)
- The Revenge of Shinobi (1989)
- Sword of Vermilion (1989)
- Fantasia (1991) (production)
- Golden Axe II (1991)
- M-1 Abrams Battle Tank (1991)
- Joe Montana Football (1991) (production)
- Dick Tracy (1991)
- Twin Cobra (1991)
- Midnight Resistance (1991)
- Alien Storm (1991)
- Spider-Man vs. The Kingpin (1991)
- ToeJam & Earl (1991)
- Joe Montana II Sports Talk Football (1991) (production)
- California Games (1991)
- Ecco the Dolphin (1992)
- Greendog: The Beached Surfer Dude! (1992) (production)
- NFL Sports Talk Football '93 Starring Joe Montana (1992) (production)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (1992)
- Taz-Mania (1992) (assistance)
- Kid Chameleon (1992)
- Shining Force (1992)
- Sports Talk Baseball (1992)
- Evander Holyfield's "Real Deal" Boxing (1992) (assistance)
- Landstalker: The Treasures of King Nole (1992)
- Toxic Crusaders (1992)
- Streets of Rage 2 (1992)
- Cool Spot (1993)
- Disney's Aladdin (1993)
- Gunstar Heroes (1993)
- Jurassic Park (1993)
- Shinobi III: Return of the Ninja Master (1993)
- Sonic the Hedgehog Spinball (1993)
- X-Men (1993) (production)
- Shining Force II (1993)
- Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine (1993)
- Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1993) (assistance)
- The Ren & Stimpy Show Presents Stimpy's Invention (1993)
- Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium (1993)
- Bonkers (1994) (production)
- Dynamite Headdy (1994)
- Ecco: The Tides of Time (1994)
- Taz in Escape from Mars (1994)
- The Story of Thor: A Successor of the Light (1994)
- Pulseman (1994)
- College Football's National Championship (1994)
- Crystal's Pony Tale (1994)
- Richard Scarry's Busytown (1994)
- The Berenstain Bears' Camping Adventure (1994)
- Wacky Worlds (1994)
- ATP Tour Championship Tennis (1995)
- Comix Zone (1995)
- Garfield: Caught in the Act (1995)
- Light Crusader (1995)
- Ristar (1995)
- Scholastic's The Magic School Bus: Space Exploration Game (1995)
- The Ooze (1995)
- VR Troopers (1995) (production)
- X-Men 2: Clone Wars (1995) (assistance)
- World Series Baseball '95 (1995)
- College Football's National Championship II (1995)
- Prime Time NFL Football Starring Deion Sanders (1995)
- BreakThru! (1996)
- Virtua Fighter 2 (1996)
- Garfield: The Lost Levels (1996)
- X-Perts (1996)
- World Series Baseball '96 (1996)
- Mega Games 10 (1997)
- World Series Baseball 98 (1997)
- NFL 98 (1997)
- Darius (2019)
- Devi & Pii (2022)
- Fantasy Zone (2022)
- Party Quiz Mega Q 2022 (2022)
- Party Quiz Sega Q (2022)
- Star Mobile (2022)
- Super Locomotive (2022)
- VS Puyo Puyo Sun (2022)
- Activator Command Demo (unreleased)
- Air Drums (unreleased)
- Arena: Maze of Death (unreleased)
- B-Bomb (unreleased)
- Baby Boom (unreleased)
- Bounty Hunter (unreleased)
- Head Tracker Test Demonstration (unreleased)
- IO Check Program (unreleased)
- Iron Hammer (unreleased)
- Jester (unreleased)
- Joe Montana Football (unreleased)
- Mario Lemieux II Hockey (unreleased)
- Monster Hunter (unreleased)
- Ratchet and Bolt (unreleased)
- SpellCaster (unreleased)
- Spinny & Spike (unreleased)
- Super Spin (unreleased)
- TeleGenesis Baseball (unreleased)
- Vectorman 3 (unreleased)
- X-Women: The Sinister Virus (unreleased)
- Nuclear Rush (unreleased)
Game Gear
- Spider-Man vs. The Kingpin (1992)
- Master of Darkness (1992)
- The Majors: Pro Baseball (1992)
- Greendog: The Beached Surfer Dude! (1993) (production)
- Streets of Rage 2 (1993)
- World Series Baseball (1993)
- Bonkers Wax Up! (1994)
- Dynamite Headdy (1994)
- Ecco: The Tides of Time (1994)
- Poker Face Paul's Gin (1994)
- Poker Face Paul's Solitaire (1994)
- Taz in Escape from Mars (1994)
- X-Men: GamesMaster's Legacy (1994)
- X-Men (1994)
- Poker Face Paul's Blackjack (1994)
- Poker Face Paul's Poker (1994)
- World Series Baseball '95 (1994)
- The Berenstain Bears' Camping Adventure (1994)
- Chicago Syndicate (1995) (production)
- Garfield: Caught in the Act (1995)
- Legend of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (1995)
- NHL All-Star Hockey (1995)
- Sports Trivia (1995)
- Sports Trivia: Championship Edition (1995)
- VR Troopers (1995) (production)
- Gunstar Heroes (1995)
- Virtua Fighter Animation (1996)
- X-Men: Mojo World (1996)
- Sonic Blast (1996)
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)
- Baby Boom (unreleased)
- David Robinson's Supreme Court (unreleased)
- NFL Football '94 Starring Joe Montana (unreleased)
- Vectorman 3 (unreleased)
Mega-CD
- Sol-Feace (1991)
- Cobra Command (1992)
- Night Trap (1992)
- After Burner III (1992)
- Batman Returns (1993)
- Spider-Man vs. The Kingpin (1993)
- Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch (1993)
- Joe Montana's NFL Football (1993)
- Ground Zero Texas (1993)
- Ecco: The Tides of Time (1994)
- Flashback (1994)
- Wild Woody (1995)
- Wirehead (1995)
- Baby Boom (unreleased)
- Cool World (unreleased)
- March of Time (unreleased)
- Prince and the N.P.G.: Diamonds and Pearls (unreleased)
- Shadow of Atlantis (unreleased)
- Sonic the Hedgehog (unreleased)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 CD (unreleased)
- Star Trek: The Next Generation: Echoes from the Past (unreleased)
- World Series Baseball (unreleased)
32X
- Virtua Racing Deluxe (1994)
- Doom (1994)
- Cosmic Carnage (1994)
- After Burner Complete (1995)
- Chaotix (1995)
- Golf Magazine: 36 Great Holes Starring Fred Couples (1995)
- Kolibri (1995)
- Metal Head (1995)
- Motocross Championship (1995)
- Star Trek: Starfleet Academy Starship Bridge Simulator (1995)
- Stellar Assault (1995)
- T-MEK (1995)
- Tempo (1995)
- Zaxxon's Motherbase 2000 (1995)
- Blackthorne (1995)
- Primal Rage (1995)
- World Series Baseball Starring Deion Sanders (1996)
- Spider-Man: Web of Fire (1996)
- 32 Xtreme (unreleased)
- College Basketball's National Championship Hosted by Billy Packer (unreleased)
- Ecco the Dolphin (unreleased)
- Garfield: Garfield in TV land! (unreleased)
- Genesis 32X Sample Program (unreleased)
- NBA Action (unreleased)
- Ratchet and Bolt (unreleased)
- Sonic Sports (unreleased)
- Virtua Hamster (unreleased)
- VR Troopers (unreleased)
- Wing War (unreleased)
- X-Men (unreleased)
Mega-CD 32X
- Shadow of Atlantis (unreleased)
Commodore 64
- After Burner (1988)
- Turbo OutRun (1989)
- Altered Beast (1990)
- Arcade Smash Hits: Limited Collector's Edition (1990)
- Golden Axe (1990)
IBM PC
- After Burner (1989)
- Altered Beast (1990)
- Arcade Smash Hits: Limited Collector's Edition (1990)
- Joe Montana Football (1990)
- Turbo OutRun (1990)
- Golden Axe (1990)
- David Robinson NBA Action (unreleased)
- Joe Montana NFL Football (unreleased)
Amiga
- After Burner (1988)
- Turbo OutRun (1989)
- Altered Beast (1990)
- Arcade Smash Hits: Limited Collector's Edition (1990)
Pico
- A Year at Pooh Corner (1994)
- Ecco Jr. and the Great Ocean Treasure Hunt! (1994)
- Magic Crayons (1994)
- Musical Zoo (1994)
- Pepe's Puzzles (1994)
- Richard Scarry's Huckle and Lowly's Busiest Day Ever (1994)
- Mickey's Blast into the Past (1994)
- Sonic the Hedgehog's Gameworld (1994)
- Tails and the Music Maker (1994)
- Pocahontas Riverbend Adventures (1995)
- The Berenstain Bears' A School Day (1995)
- The Lion King: Adventures at Pride Rock (1995)
- Crayola Crayons: Create a World (1995)
- Scholastic's The Magic School Bus Going Places (1995)
- Storyware Sampler (1996)
- Smart Alex and Smart Alice: Curious Kids (1996)
- The Muppets On The Go! (1996)
- Math Antics with Disney's 101 Dalmatians (1996)
- Sesame Street: Alphabet Avenue (1997)
- Pinocchio (unreleased)
Saturn
- Bug! Playable Preview (1995)
- Virtua Fighter 2 (1995)
- Sega Saturn Choice Cuts (1995)
- NHL All-Star Hockey (1995) (production)
- Black Fire (1995)
- Ghen War (1995)
- Cyber Troopers Virtual-On (1996)
- Fighting Vipers (1996)
- NiGHTS into Dreams (1996)
- Sega Screams Volume 1 (1996)
- Congo the Movie: The Lost City of Zinj (1996)
- 3 Free Games With Purchase of Sega Saturn (1996)
- NFL '97 (1996)
- Sega Screams Volume 2 (1997)
- World Series Baseball 98 (1997)
- Cyber Troopers Virtual-On NetLink Edition (1997)
- NetLink Game Pack (1997)
- Daytona USA: C.C.E. NetLink Edition (1998)
- Alien Hive (unreleased)
- Astrocade (unreleased)
- Blast Track (unreleased)
- Comix Zone (unreleased)
- Ecco the Dolphin (unreleased)
- Eternal Champions: The Final Chapter (unreleased)
- Free Runner (unreleased)
- Prime Time NFL Football Starring Deion Sanders (unreleased)
- Roach Racing (unreleased)
- Shadow of Atlantis (unreleased)
- Sonic X-treme (unreleased)
- Vectorman 3 (unreleased)
- Virtua Hamster (unreleased)
- Sonic Saturn (unreleased)
Dreamcast
- Sonic Adventure (1998)
- Generator Vol. 1 (1999)
- Web Browser (1999)
- Sega Swirl (2000)
- Skies of Arcadia (2000)
- NFL 2K2 (2001)
- NBA 2K2 (2001)
- 10SIX (unreleased)
- Black & White (unreleased)
- Ecco II: Sentinels of the Universe (unreleased)
- Frontier (unreleased)
- Geist Force (unreleased)
- Internet Game Pack (unreleased)
- KRAD (unreleased)
- Over the Top Soccer (unreleased)
- Frog Pond (unreleased)
Game Boy Advance
- Baseball Advance (2002)
- Sega Rally Championship (2002)
- Sonic Pinball Party (2003)
- Astro Boy: Omega Factor (2003)
- Gunstar Super Heroes (2005)
- 2 Games in 1: Sonic Advance & Sonic Pinball Party (2005)
- The Tower SP (2006)
- Charlotte's Web (2006)
- Sonic the Hedgehog Genesis (2006)
PlayStation 2
- NFL 2K2 (2001)
- Sega Soccer Slam (2002)
- NBA 2K2 (2002)
- Aero Elite: Combat Academy (2002)
- NCAA College Football 2K3 (2002)
- NFL 2K3 (2002)
- Gungrave (2002)
- NBA 2K3 (2002)
- NCAA College Basketball 2K3 (2002)
- ESPN NFL Football (2003)
- World Series Baseball 2K3 (2003)
- ESPN NHL Hockey (2003)
- ESPN NBA Basketball (2003)
- ESPN College Hoops (2003)
- Sonic Heroes (2003)
- Headhunter Redemption (2004)
- Samurai Jack: The Shadow of Aku (2004)
- Worms Forts: Under Siege (2004)
- ESPN Major League Baseball (2004)
- ESPN NFL 2K5 (2004)
- Virtua Quest (2004)
- ESPN NHL 2K5 (2004)
- ESPN NBA 2K5 (2004)
- Sonic Mega Collection Plus (2004)
- Shining Tears (2004)
- ESPN College Hoops 2K5 (2004)
- Shadow the Hedgehog (2005)
- Sonic Gems Collection (2005)
- Spartan: Total Warrior (2005)
- Super Monkey Ball Deluxe (2005)
- Shining Force Neo (2005)
- Taito Legends (2005)
- Stuart Little 3: Big Photo Adventure (2005)
- OutRun 2006: Coast 2 Coast (2006)
- Sonic Riders (2006)
- Super Monkey Ball Adventure (2006)
- Sega Mega Drive Collection (2006)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Shining Force EXA (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- Sonic Riders: Zero Gravity (2008)
- Sonic Unleashed (2008)
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- NiGHTS into Dreams (2008)
- Sega Fun Pack: Sonic Mega Collection Plus & Shadow the Hedgehog (2009)
- Vectorman (unreleased)
GameCube
- Super Monkey Ball (2001)
- Sonic Adventure 2: Battle (2001)
- Sega Soccer Slam (2002)
- Home Run King (2002)
- NBA 2K2 (2002)
- NFL 2K3 (2002)
- Super Monkey Ball 2 (2002)
- NCAA College Football 2K3 (2002)
- NBA 2K3 (2002)
- Sonic Mega Collection (2002)
- NCAA College Basketball 2K3 (2002)
- Skies of Arcadia (2002)
- Nintendo GameCube Preview Disc (2003)
- Billy Hatcher and the Giant Egg (2003)
- Phantasy Star Online Episode III: C.A.R.D. Revolution (2003)
- Sonic Heroes (2003)
- Samurai Jack: The Shadow of Aku (2004)
- Amazing Island (2004)
- Virtua Quest (2004)
- Super Monkey Ball 2 Pack (2004)
- Shadow the Hedgehog (2005)
- Sonic Gems Collection (2005)
- Spartan: Total Warrior (2005)
- Sonic Riders (2006)
- Super Monkey Ball Adventure (2006)
- Sonic Adventure 2-Pack (200x)
Xbox
- Gunvalkyrie (2002)
- Jet Set Radio Future (2002)
- Panzer Dragoon Orta Demo Disc (2002)
- Sega GT 2002 (2002)
- Sega Soccer Slam (2002)
- NFL 2K2 (2002)
- NBA 2K2 (2002)
- World Series Baseball (2002)
- NFL 2K3 (2002)
- NCAA College Football 2K3 (2002)
- NBA 2K3 (2002)
- Sega GT 2002/Jet Set Radio Future (2002)
- ToeJam & Earl III: Mission to Earth (2002)
- Shenmue II (2002)
- NCAA College Basketball 2K3 (2002)
- ESPN NBA Basketball (2003)
- Otogi: Myth of Demons (2003)
- World Series Baseball 2K3 (2003)
- ESPN NFL Football (2003)
- ESPN NHL Hockey (2003)
- ESPN College Hoops (2003)
- Sega GT Online (2003)
- Sonic Heroes (2003)
- Headhunter Redemption (2004)
- ESPN Major League Baseball (2004)
- ESPN NFL 2K5 (2004)
- ESPN NHL 2K5 (2004)
- ESPN NBA 2K5 (2004)
- Otogi 2: Immortal Warriors (2004)
- Sonic Mega Collection Plus (2004)
- ESPN College Hoops 2K5 (2004)
- Worms Forts: Under Siege (2004)
- Shadow the Hedgehog (2005)
- Spikeout: Battle Street (2005)
- Super Monkey Ball Deluxe (2005)
- Iron Phoenix (2005)
- Spartan: Total Warrior (2005)
- Taito Legends (2005)
- 2 in 1 Combo Pack: Sonic Heroes/Super Monkey Ball Deluxe (2005)
- 2 in 1 Combo Pack: Sonic Mega Collection Plus/Super Monkey Ball Deluxe (2005)
- Sonic Riders (2006)
- OutRun 2006: Coast 2 Coast (2006)
N-Gage
- Sonic N (2003)
- Super Monkey Ball (2003)
Nintendo DS
- Feel the Magic: XY/XX (2004)
- Sonic Rush (2005)
- The Rub Rabbits! (2005)
- Sega Casino (2005)
- Bleach: The Blade of Fate (2006)
- Charlotte's Web (2006)
- Mystery Dungeon: Shiren the Wanderer (2006)
- Bleach: Dark Souls (2007)
- Brain Assist (2007)
- Sonic Rush Adventure (2007)
- PictoImage (2007)
- Dinosaur King (2007)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2008)
- Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood (2008)
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- Bleach: The 3rd Phantom (2008)
- Sands of Destruction (2008)
- Phantasy Star 0 (2008)
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009)
- Planet 51: The Game (2009)
- The Hardy Boys: Treasure on the Tracks (2009)
- Sega Fun Pack: Sonic Rush & Super Monkey Ball: Touch & Roll (2009)
- Infinite Space (2009)
- Jambo! Safari: Animal Rescue (2009)
- Iron Man 2 (2010)
- Sonic Classic Collection (2010)
- Sonic Colours (2010)
- Aliens: Infestation (2011)
- Captain America: Super Soldier (2011)
- Thor: God of Thunder (2011)
PlayStation Portable
- Virtua Tennis: World Tour (2005)
- OutRun 2006: Coast 2 Coast (2006)
- Sonic Rivals (2006)
- Super Monkey Ball Adventure (2006)
- Sega Mega Drive Collection (2006)
- After Burner: Black Falcon (2007)
- Alien Syndrome (2007)
- Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars (2007)
- Crush (2007)
- Full Auto 2: Battlelines (2007)
- Sega Rally Revo (2007)
- Sonic Rivals 2 (2007)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- Phantasy Star Portable (2008)
- Sega Fun Pack: Sonic Rivals 2 & Sega Genesis Collection (2009)
- Phantasy Star Portable 2 (2009)
- Valkyria Chronicles II (2009)
- Iron Man 2 (2010)
- Phantasy Star Defender's Pack! (2011)
- Double Rivals Attack Pack! (2011)
- Double Super Hero Pack! (2011)
Xbox 360
- Condemned (2005)
- Chromehounds (2006)
- Sonic the Hedgehog (2006)
- Full Auto (2006)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Armored Core 4 (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- Sonic Unleashed (2008)
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- Sega Soccer Slam (2008)
- Planet 51: The Game (2009)
- Virtua Tennis 2009 (2009)
- Resonance of Fate (2009)
- Iron Man 2 (2010)
- Sonic Free Riders (2010)
- Sonic Adventure (2010)
- Captain America: Super Soldier (2011)
- Dreamcast Collection (2011)
- Rise of Nightmares (2011)
- Sonic Generations (2011)
- Thor: God of Thunder (2011)
- Renegade Ops (2011)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode II (2012)
- Anarchy Reigns (2012)
- Jet Set Radio (2012)
- Sonic Adventure 2 (2012)
- Alien: Isolation (2014)
- Aliens: Crucible (unreleased)
PlayStation 3
- Full Auto 2: Battlelines (2006)
- Sonic the Hedgehog (2006)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Armored Core 4 (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- Valkyria Chronicles (2008)
- Sonic Unleashed (2008)
- Planet 51: The Game (2009)
- Virtua Tennis 2009 (2009)
- Yakuza 3 (2009)
- Iron Man 2 (2010)
- Resonance of Fate (2010)
- Yakuza 4 (2010)
- Sonic Adventure (2010)
- Captain America: Super Soldier (2011)
- Sonic Generations (2011)
- Thor: God of Thunder (2011)
- Renegade Ops (2011)
- Sonic Heroes (2012)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode II (2012)
- Anarchy Reigns (2012)
- Jet Set Radio (2012)
- Sonic Adventure 2 (2012)
- Yakuza 5 (2012)
- Shadow the Hedgehog (2013)
- Alien: Isolation (2014)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA F 2nd (2014)
- Yakuza 0 (2015)
- Aliens: Crucible (unreleased)
Wii
- Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz (2006)
- Bleach: Shattered Blade (2006)
- Alien Syndrome (2007)
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2007)
- Sonic and the Secret Rings (2007)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Ghost Squad (2007)
- NiGHTS: Journey of Dreams (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- Samba de Amigo (2008)
- Sega Bass Fishing (2008)
- Sonic Riders: Zero Gravity (2008)
- Sonic Unleashed (2008)
- The House of the Dead 2 & 3 Return (2008)
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- Nancy Drew: The White Wolf of Icicle Creek (2008)
- Let's Tap (2008)
- Daisy Fuentes Pilates (2009)
- Jambo! Safari: Animal Rescue (2009)
- MadWorld (2009)
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009)
- Planet 51: The Game (2009)
- Sonic and the Black Knight (2009)
- The Conduit (2009)
- The House of the Dead: Overkill (2009)
- Virtua Tennis 2009 (2009)
- Wacky World of Sports (2009)
- Sega Fun Pack: Sonic and the Secret Rings & Super Monkey Ball Banana Blitz (2009)
- Gunblade NY & LA Machineguns (2010)
- Iron Man 2 (2010)
- Sonic Colours (2010)
- Tournament of Legends (2010)
- Super Monkey Ball: Step & Roll (2010)
- Captain America: Super Soldier (2011)
- Conduit 2 (2011)
- Thor: God of Thunder (2011)
Nintendo 3DS
- Captain America: Super Soldier (2011)
- Shinobi 3D (2011)
- Sonic Generations (2011)
- Super Monkey Ball 3D (2011)
- Thor: God of Thunder (2011)
- Crush 3D (2012)
- Rhythm Thief & the Emperor's Treasure (2012)
- 3D Space Harrier (2012)
- Sonic Lost World (2013)
- 3D Super Hang-On (2013)
- 3D Sonic the Hedgehog (2013)
- 3D Altered Beast (2013)
- 3D Ecco the Dolphin (2013)
- 3D Galaxy Force II (2013)
- 3D Shinobi III (2013)
- 3D Streets of Rage (2013)
- 3D After Burner II (2013)
- Sonic Boom: Shattered Crystal (2014)
- 3D Fantasy Zone: Opa-Opa Bros. (2014)
- 3D OutRun (2014)
- 3D Fantasy Zone II W (2014)
- 3D Thunder Blade (2014)
- 3D Streets of Rage 2 (2015)
- Hatsune Miku: Project Mirai DX (2015)
- 3D Gunstar Heroes (2015)
- 3D Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (2015)
- 7th Dragon III Code: VFD (2015)
- Sega 3D Classics Collection (2015)
- Sonic Boom: Fire & Ice (2016)
PlayStation Vita
- Virtua Tennis 4: World Tour Edition (2011)
- Super Monkey Ball: Banana Splitz (2012)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA f (2012)
- Jet Set Radio (2012)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA F 2nd (2014)
- Football Manager 2014 (2014)
- Yakuza 0 (2015)
- Superdimension Neptune VS Sega Hard Girls (2015)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA X (2016)
- Valkyria Revolution (2017)
- Super Monkey Ball Adventure (201x)
Wii U
- Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric (2014)
PlayStation 4
- Alien: Isolation (2014)
- Yakuza 0 (2015)
- Tembo the Badass Elephant (2015)
- Valkyria Chronicles (2016)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA X (2016)
- Hatsune Miku: VR Future Live (2016)
- Sonic Mania (2017)
- Valkyria Revolution (2017)
- Yakuza Kiwami 2 (2017)
- Sega Mega Drive Classics (2018)
- Shining Resonance Refrain (2018)
- Sonic Mania Plus (2018)
- Puyo Puyo Champions (2018)
- Team Sonic Racing (2019)
- Citizens of Space (2019)
- SolSeraph (2019)
Xbox One
- Alien: Isolation (2014)
- Tembo the Badass Elephant (2015)
- Sonic Mania (2017)
- Valkyria Revolution (2017)
- Sega Mega Drive Classics (2018)
- Shining Resonance Refrain (2018)
- Sonic Mania Plus (2018)
- Team Sonic Racing (2019)
- Puyo Puyo Champions (2019)
- Citizens of Space (2019)
- SolSeraph (2019)
- Yakuza 0 (2020)
- Yakuza Kiwami 2 (2020)
- Yakuza 3 (2021)
- Yakuza 4 (2021)
- Yakuza 5 (2021)
- Football Manager 2022 Xbox Edition (2021)
PlayStation Now
- Jet Set Radio (2015)
- Renegade Ops (2015)
- Resonance of Fate (2015)
- Sonic Adventure (2015)
- Sonic Adventure 2 (2015)
- Sonic Generations (2015)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode II (2015)
- Sonic Unleashed (2015)
Nintendo Switch
- Sonic Mania (2017)
- Shining Resonance Refrain (2018)
- Sonic Mania Plus (2018)
- Sega Ages Sonic the Hedgehog (2018)
- Sega Ages Thunder Force IV (2018)
- Valkyria Chronicles (2018)
- Puyo Puyo Champions (2018)
- Sega Ages Phantasy Star (2018)
- Football Manager 2019 Touch (2018)
- Sega Ages OutRun (2018)
- Sega Mega Drive Classics (2018)
- Sega Ages Gain Ground (2018)
- Sega Ages Alex Kidd in Miracle World (2019)
- Sega Ages Puyo Puyo (2019)
- Sega Ages Virtua Racing (2019)
- Team Sonic Racing (2019)
- Sega Ages Wonder Boy: Monster Land (2019)
- Citizens of Space (2019)
- Sega Ages Space Harrier (2019)
- SolSeraph (2019)
- Sega Ages Columns II (2019)
- Sega Ages Ichidant-R (2019)
- Sega Ages Shinobi (2019)
- Sega Ages Fantasy Zone (2019)
- Football Manager 2020 Touch (2019)
- Sonic Forces + Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz HD Double Pack (2020)
- Sonic Mania + Team Sonic Racing Double Pack (2020)
- Sega Ages G-LOC: Air Battle (2020)
- Football Manager 2021 Touch (2020)
- Football Manager 2022 Touch (2021)
- Football Manager 2023 Touch (2022)
- Etrian Odyssey HD (2023)
- Etrian Odyssey II HD (2023)
- Etrian Odyssey III HD (2023)
- Etrian Odyssey Origins Collection (2023)
- Football Manager 2024 Touch (2023)
- Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! (2024)
- Super Monkey Ball Banana Rumble (2024)
- Football Manager 25 Touch (2025)
Nintendo Switch Online
Windows PC
- The Gigglebone Gang: AlphaBonk Farm (1994)
- Elroy Goes Bugzerk (1995)
- The Gigglebone Gang: Pantsylvania (1995)
- Elroy Hits the Pavement (1996)
- Sonic's Schoolhouse (1996)
- Garfield: Caught in the Act (1997)
- Sega Rally Championship (1997)
- Sega Worldwide Soccer 97 (1997)
- Sonic 3D: Flickies' Island (1997)
- Daytona USA Deluxe (1997)
- Sega Touring Car Championship (1998)
- Sega Puzzle Pack (1999) (production)
- Sega Smash Pack (1999) (production)
- Sega Smash Pack 2 (2000) (production)
- Sega Swirl (2000)
- Sonic Adventure DX: Director's Cut (2003)
- NHL Eastside Hockey Manager (2004)
- Sonic Heroes (2004)
- Worms Forts: Under Siege (2004)
- Taito Legends (2005)
- Billy Hatcher and the Giant Egg (2006)
- Sonic Mega Collection Plus (2006)
- Condemned (2006)
- OutRun 2006: Coast 2 Coast (2006)
- Charlotte's Web: Wilbur and Friends (2006)
- Sonic Riders (2006)
- The Golden Compass (2007)
- Iron Man (2008)
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- Virtua Tennis 2009 (2009)
- Total War: Battle Pack (2010)
- Shogun 2: Gold Edition (2013)
- Football Manager 2014 (2013)
- Alien: Isolation (2014)
- Empire: Total War/Napoleon: Total War (2015)
- Aliens: Crucible (unreleased)
- Sonic X-treme (unreleased)
- Warhammer Online (unreleased)
Steam
- The Incredible Hulk (2008)
- Virtua Tennis 2009 (2009)
- Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine (2010)
- Jet Set Radio (2012)
- Condemned (2012)
- Football Manager 2014 (2013)
- Alien: Isolation (2014)
- Tembo the Badass Elephant (2015)
- Sega Mega Drive Classics (2017)
- Sonic Mania (2017)
- Shining Resonance Refrain (2018)
- Yakuza 0 (2018)
- Football Manager 2019 Touch (2018)
- Puyo Puyo Champions (2019)
- Team Sonic Racing (2019)
- Citizens of Space (2019)
- SolSeraph (2019)
- Football Manager 2020 Touch (2019)
- Football Manager 2021 Touch (2020)
- Etrian Odyssey HD (2023)
- Etrian Odyssey II HD (2023)
- Etrian Odyssey III HD (2023)
- Etrian Odyssey Origins Collection (2023)
Palm OS
- Sega Swirl (2002)
Android
- Jet Set Radio (2012)
- Football Manager 2019 Touch (2018)
- Football Manager 2020 Touch (2019)
- Football Manager 2021 Touch (2020)
iOS
- Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode II (2012)
- Jet Set Radio (2012)
- Football Manager 2019 Touch (2018)
- Football Manager 2020 Touch (2019)
- Football Manager 2021 Touch (2020)
- Football Manager 2023 Touch (2022)
- Football Manager 2024 Touch (2023)
LCD
- Amazing Sonic (1994)
- Baseball (1994)
- Ecco the Dolphin (1994)
- Eternal Champions: Special Moves Edition (1994)
- Football (1994)
Master System
- Joe Montana Football (1990)
- Ariel the Little Mermaid (1992)
- California Games II (1993)
- Ecco the Dolphin (1993)
- Home Alone (1993)
- Sonic Spinball (1993)
- Ecco: The Tides of Time (1994)
Mega Drive
- Ariel the Little Mermaid (1992)
- Dungeons & Dragons: Warriors of the Eternal Sun (1992)
- Menacer 6-Game Cartridge (1992)
- TaleSpin (1992)
- Barney's Hide & Seek Game (1993)
- Cyborg Justice (1993)
- Dinosaurs for Hire (1993)
- Eternal Champions (1993)
- NFL Football '94 Starring Joe Montana (1993)
- Richard Scarry's Busytown (1993)
- ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron (1993)
- Jurassic Park: Rampage Edition (1994)
- Shadowrun (1994)
- The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles (1994)
- World Series Baseball (1994)
- Ecco Jr. (1995)
- Striker (1995)
- The Adventures of Batman & Robin (1995)
- Vectorman (1995)
- Vectorman 2 (1996)
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)
Game Gear
- Joe Montana Football (1991)
- Ariel the Little Mermaid (1992)
- California Games II (1993)
- Ecco the Dolphin (1993)
- Home Alone (1993)
- Sonic Spinball (1993)
Sega CD
Sega 32X
- Space Harrier (1994)
- Star Wars Arcade (1994)
- Virtua Fighter (1995)
Sega Saturn
- Bug! (1995)
- Die Hard Arcade (1996)
- Three Dirty Dwarves (1996)
- Mr. Bones (1996)
- NBA Action (1996)
- Bug Too! (1997)
- Manx TT Super Bike (1997)
- Scud: The Disposable Assassin (1997)
- Sky Target (1997)
- The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)
Dreamcast
- NBA 2K (1999)
- NFL 2K (1999)
- Metropolis Street Racer (2000)
- NBA 2K1 (2000)
- NFL 2K1 (2000)
- Floigan Bros. Episode 1 (2001)
- Headhunter (2001)
- NCAA College Football 2K2 (2001)
- Ecco the Dolphin: Defender of the Future (2001)
- Ooga Booga (2001)
PlayStation 2
GameBoy Advance
- Altered Beast: Guardian of the Realms (2002)
- Phantasy Star Collection (2002)
- Super Monkey Ball (2002)
- The Revenge of Shinobi (Game Boy Advance) (2002)
- Crazy Taxi: Catch a Ride (2003)
- Jet Set Radio (Game Boy Advance) (2003)
Xbox 360
- Condemned 2: Bloodshot (2008)
- Golden Axe: Beast Rider (2008)
- Universe at War: Earth Assault (2008)
- Sega Mega Drive Ultimate Collection (2009)
- Aliens vs. Predator (2010)
- Alpha Protocol (2010)
- Aliens: Colonial Marines (2013)
- The Cave (2013)
PlayStation 3
- Condemned 2: Bloodshot (2008)
Wii U
- The Cave (2013)
Xbox One
- Sonic Mania (2017)
PlayStation 4
- Sonic Mania (2017)
Nintendo Switch
- Sonic Mania (2017)
PC
- Tomcat Alley (1995)
- The Matrix Online (2005)
- Space Siege (2008)
- Universe at War: Earth Assault (2008)
- Alpha Protocol (2010)
- MLB Manager Online (2011)
- Spiral Knights (2011)
- Aliens: Colonial Marines (2013)
- Godsrule: War of Mortals (2013)
- Sonic Mania (2017)
Photo gallery
External links
References
- ↑ California Business Search: Entity #C1299989
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Sega Visions, "February/March 1993" (US; 199x-xx-xx), page 81
- ↑ Summer CES Directory, page 269
- ↑ E3 2001 Directory, page 103
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ California Business Search: Entity #C1299989