Difference between revisions of "Shinjuku Joypolis"

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{{VenueBob
 
{{VenueBob
 
| logo=Joypolis.svg
 
| logo=Joypolis.svg
| venueimage=
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| venueimage=Shinjuku Joypolis Exterior.jpeg
| name=
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| name=Shinjuku Joypolis
| location=Takashimaya Times Square, Tokyoto, Japan
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| location=東京都渋谷区千駄ヶ谷5丁目24番地2号タカシマヤタイムズスクエア10F・11, Japan
| opened=1996-10-04
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| opened=1996-10-04{{magref|ssmjp|1996-17|30}}
| closed=2000-08-14
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| closed=2000-08-31{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20000820095044/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/news/news2000/jpnews0801.html}}
 
}}
 
}}
{{sub-stub}}
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'''Shinjuku Joypolis''' (新宿ジョイポリス) was a [[Joypolis]] indoor amusement theme park opened by [[Sega]]. The last of the three branches of the chain to open in Tokyo, it closed after nearly four years of operations in August 2000,{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20000820095044/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/news/news2000/jpnews0801.html}} and was among the first casualties caused by a restructuring at the company and declining revenue from amusement venues.
'''Shinjuku Joypolis''' (新宿ジョイポリス) was an [[Joypolis]] indoor theme park opened in October 1996.
 
  
Little is known about the Shinjuku branch, aside from closing in 2000 due to low visitor numbers.
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==History==
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After the successful openings of [[Osaka ATC Galbo]] and [[Yokohama Joypolis]] under the new [[Amusement Theme Park]] concept, [[Sega AM5]] and the [[Amusement Theme Park Division|ATP Division]] moved ahead with expanding Sega's indoor theme park operations. By late 1995, two new [[Galbo]] parks had been opened in Yokkaichi and Ichikawa, with a further two planned for Fukuoka and Shinjuku in 1996;{{magref|gamemachinejp|513|2}} however, a restructuring of these plans had taken place by January of that year, as a result of poorer than expected visitor numbers for the aforementioned Yokkaichi and Ichikawa branches.{{magref|gamemachinejp|513|2}} In the space of a few months, attractions and entry fees were removed from the underperforming locations, and future use of the Galbo naming scheme was subsequently scrapped, rendering Joypolis as the preferred scheme for Japan. The future parks were accordingly taken in under the branding, becoming
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[[Fukuoka Joypolis]] and Shinjuku Joypolis.
 +
 
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Shinjuku Joypolis eventually opened in October 1996, as one of the original entertainment tenants of the Takashimaya Times Square department store on its opening day.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19970215204845/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/shinjuku/access.html}} Taking up 5,600m² across the 10th and 11th floors of the building,{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19970215204822/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/shinjuku/data.html}} its space was zoned into four central themes and colours - "First Impression" (white), "Warm Up" (yellow), "Heat Up" (red), and "Cool Down" (blue), their intended effects being to excite then calm visitors.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19970215204723/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/shinjuku/zone.html}} Six new attractions were debuted at the venue on opening day, with significant Sega-made examples including ''[[Sega Rally Special Stage]]'' and ''[[Murder Lodge]]'', as well as the first octagonal air hockey table, ''[[Panic Hockey]]''.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19970215204822/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/shinjuku/data.html}} A Dippin' Dots outlet, [[SegaSonic & Tails]] gift shop, and an official restaurant, All Players Café, served as additional facilities.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19970215204822/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/shinjuku/data.html}}
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Initially performing well, the Shinjuku branch held frequent events and housed numerous new additions in the following years, notably being chosen as the debut location for the award-winning ''[[Wild River]]'' attraction in February 1998 and hosting a special press release event streamed on the park's official online homepage for its opening.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19990823003915/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/news/news97/jpnews980225.html}} Despite this, it became the first Joypolis to be closed permanently, completing its final day of operation at the end of August 2000.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20000820095044/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/news/news2000/jpnews0801.html}} Though restructuring measures may have also influenced the decision, its closure was publicly attributed to lower than expected visitor numbers; Sega cited competition from the flagship [[Tokyo Joypolis]] location situated elsewhere in the capital.{{ref|https://nlab.itmedia.co.jp/games/gsnews/0008/02/news03.html}} Its space is now partly occupied by a Yuzawaya craft shop.
  
 
==Attractions==
 
==Attractions==
{{multicol|
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===11th floor (11F)===
*''[[Aqua Nova]]''
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{{AttractionList|Shinjuku Joypolis|floor=11F}}
*''[[Fortune Museum]]''
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*''[[Ghost Hunters II]]''
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===10th floor (10F)===
*''[[The Lost World: Jurassic Park Special]]''
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{{AttractionList|Shinjuku Joypolis|floor=10F}}
*''[[Mission Q]]''
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*''[[Power Sled]]''
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===Original attractions===
*''[[Sega Rally Special Stage]]''
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*''[[Ghost Hunters|Ghost Hunters DX]]'' (04-10-1996 - 1997)
*''[[Super Ranking]]''
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*''[[Murder Lodge]]'' (04-10-1996 - 2000)
*''[[Wild River]]''
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*''[[Shocking Maze]]'' (04-10-1996 - 199x)
}}
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===Later attractions===
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*''[[Ghost Hunters#Treasure Panic| Ghost Hunters II]]'' (1997 - 31-08-2000)
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*''[[Bike Athlon]]'' (25-07-1998 - 31-08-2000)
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*''[[Dennou Senki Virtual-On Special]]'' (18-04-1999 - 2000)
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==Videos==
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<gallery>
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Shinjuku_Joypolis_1996.mp4|Footage circa December 1996
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</gallery>
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==Gallery==
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<gallery>
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Shinjuku Joypolis Outside.jpg|Venue in October 1996
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Shinjuku Joypolis Entrance 1996.jpg
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Shinjuku 1996 2.jpg|"Media Tower"
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Shinjuku 1996 3.jpg
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Shinjuku Joypolis Entrance.jpg|Entrance façade in late 90s
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Shinjuku Joypolis Sonic.jpg|Sonic mascot
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Shinjuku Joypolis FortuneMuseum.jpg|''Fortune Museum''
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Shinjuku Joypolis MissionQ.jpg|''Mission Q''
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Shinjuku Joypolis PowerSled.jpg|''Power Sled''
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Shinjuku Joypolis SegaRally.jpg|''Sega Rally Special Stage''
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Shinjuku Joypolis IrritatingStick.jpg|''Shocking Maze''
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</gallery>
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==Magazine articles==
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{{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Magazine articles}}
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==Promotional material==
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<gallery>
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Shinjuku_Flyer1.jpg|Leaflet front + back
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Shinjuku_Flyer2.jpg|Leaflet inside
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Shinjuku_JR1.jpg|Flyer front
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Shinjuku_JR2.jpg|Flyer back
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</gallery>
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==External links==
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/19970216123137/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/shinjuku/home.html 1997 sega.jp homepage] (archived)
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/19990427062915/http://www.sega.co.jp:80/sega/atp/shinjuku/home.html 1999 sega.jp homepage] (archived)
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references />
 
<references />
{{clear}}
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{{ShinjukuJoypolisOmni}}
 
{{Joypolis}}
 
{{Joypolis}}

Revision as of 14:05, 29 January 2025

Joypolis.svg
Shinjuku Joypolis Exterior.jpeg
Shinjuku Joypolis
Location: 東京都渋谷区千駄ヶ谷5丁目24番地2号タカシマヤタイムズスクエア10F・11, Japan
Opened: 1996-10-04[1]
Closed: 2000-08-31[2]

Shinjuku Joypolis (新宿ジョイポリス) was a Joypolis indoor amusement theme park opened by Sega. The last of the three branches of the chain to open in Tokyo, it closed after nearly four years of operations in August 2000,[2] and was among the first casualties caused by a restructuring at the company and declining revenue from amusement venues.

History

After the successful openings of Osaka ATC Galbo and Yokohama Joypolis under the new Amusement Theme Park concept, Sega AM5 and the ATP Division moved ahead with expanding Sega's indoor theme park operations. By late 1995, two new Galbo parks had been opened in Yokkaichi and Ichikawa, with a further two planned for Fukuoka and Shinjuku in 1996;[3] however, a restructuring of these plans had taken place by January of that year, as a result of poorer than expected visitor numbers for the aforementioned Yokkaichi and Ichikawa branches.[3] In the space of a few months, attractions and entry fees were removed from the underperforming locations, and future use of the Galbo naming scheme was subsequently scrapped, rendering Joypolis as the preferred scheme for Japan. The future parks were accordingly taken in under the branding, becoming Fukuoka Joypolis and Shinjuku Joypolis.

Shinjuku Joypolis eventually opened in October 1996, as one of the original entertainment tenants of the Takashimaya Times Square department store on its opening day.[4] Taking up 5,600m² across the 10th and 11th floors of the building,[5] its space was zoned into four central themes and colours - "First Impression" (white), "Warm Up" (yellow), "Heat Up" (red), and "Cool Down" (blue), their intended effects being to excite then calm visitors.[6] Six new attractions were debuted at the venue on opening day, with significant Sega-made examples including Sega Rally Special Stage and Murder Lodge, as well as the first octagonal air hockey table, Panic Hockey.[5] A Dippin' Dots outlet, SegaSonic & Tails gift shop, and an official restaurant, All Players Café, served as additional facilities.[5]

Initially performing well, the Shinjuku branch held frequent events and housed numerous new additions in the following years, notably being chosen as the debut location for the award-winning Wild River attraction in February 1998 and hosting a special press release event streamed on the park's official online homepage for its opening.[7] Despite this, it became the first Joypolis to be closed permanently, completing its final day of operation at the end of August 2000.[2] Though restructuring measures may have also influenced the decision, its closure was publicly attributed to lower than expected visitor numbers; Sega cited competition from the flagship Tokyo Joypolis location situated elsewhere in the capital.[8] Its space is now partly occupied by a Yuzawaya craft shop.

Attractions

11th floor (11F)

10th floor (10F)

Original attractions

Later attractions

Videos

Gallery

Magazine articles

Main article: Shinjuku Joypolis/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

External links

References


CollapseShinjuku Joypolis

Shinjuku Joypolis Exterior.jpeg

Main page | Magazine articles


No results



CollapseAttractions at Shinjuku Joypolis
11th floor (11F) Aqua Nova (1996 – 2000) | Dippin' Dots Ice Cream (1996 – 2000) | Panic Hockey (1996 – ) | Power Sled (1996 – 2000) | Sega Rally Special Stage (1996 – 2000) | SegaSonic & Tails (1996 – 2000) | Shocking Maze (1996 – 199x) | Super Ranking (1996 – 2000) | Cartoon Street (1998 – 2000) | Mystery Walk (1998 – 2000) | Bike Athlon (1998 – 2000) | The Lost World: Jurassic Park Special (1998 – 2000) | Kaseifu Obatan no Jikenbo: Tsubaki no Meikyuu (1998 – 1999)
10th floor (10F) Mint ( – ) | All Player's Cafe (1996 – 2000) | Fortune Museum (1996 – 2000) | Ghost Hunters II: Dokuga no Meikyuu (1996 – 2000) | Mission Q (1996 – 2000) | Murder Lodge (1996 – 1999) | Gekiryu: Wild River (1998 – 2000) | Dennou Senki Virtual-On Oratorio Tangram Special (1999 – 2000) | The Ring: 3D Sound (1999 – 2000) | Ring 0: Sadako (1999 – )
CollapseJoypolis venues
Current
Tokyo Joypolis (1996) | Shanghai Joypolis (2016)
Former
Shinjuku Joypolis (1996-2000) | Niigata Joypolis (1995-2001) | Yokohama Joypolis (1994-2001) | Fukuoka Joypolis (1996-2001) | Kyoto Joypolis (1997-2002) | Umeda Joypolis (1998-2018) | Okayama Joypolis (1998-2018) | Qingdao Joypolis (2015-2023) | Joypolis VR Shibuya (2018-2020)