Difference between revisions of "Hideki Sato"
From Sega Retro
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{PersonBob | {{PersonBob | ||
− | | image= | + | | image=sato.jpg |
| birthplace=Hokkaido, Japan | | birthplace=Hokkaido, Japan | ||
| dob=1950-11-05 | | dob=1950-11-05 |
Revision as of 16:39, 6 August 2017
320x240px |
Hideki Sato |
---|
Place of birth: Hokkaido, Japan |
Date of birth: 1950-11-05 (age 74) |
Role(s): Executive, Developer |
Education: Tokyo Metropolitan Technical College |
This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.
Hideki Sato (佐藤 秀樹), born 5 November 1950 in Hokkaido, Japan, who designed many Sega consoles and served as president from 2001 to 2003. After graduating from Tokyo Metropolitan Technical College, He joined Sega in 1971, involving himself with arcade hardware. Sato and his team are credited for creating the majority of Sega consumer hardware - the SG-1000, Sega Master System, Sega Mega Drive, Sega Saturn and Sega Dreamcast.
In 2008, he and with others established a company called Advance Create, Inc.
Production history
- Star Jacker (System 1 Version) — Hard Work By [sic]
- Burning Rangers (1998) — Executive Management
- Sonic Adventure (1999) — Executive Management
- ChuChu Rocket! (DC Version) (1999) — Executive Producer
- ChuChu Rocket! (GBA Version) (1999) — Executive Producer
- Phantasy Star Online (2001) — Executive Management
- Sonic Adventure 2 (2001) — Executive Management
- Phantasy Star Online Ver.2 (2001) — Executive Management
- Sonic Advance (2002) — Executive Producer
- Sonic Adventure 2: Battle (2002) — Executive Management
- Phantasy Star Online Episode 1 & 2 (2002) — Executive Management
- Sonic Mega Collection (2002) — Executive Producer
- Sonic Advance 2 (2003) — Executive Producer
- Sonic Adventure DX: Director's Cut (2003) — Executive Producer
External link
References
SEGA of Japan Executives | |
---|---|
Chairmen | Isao Okawa (1984-2001) | Hajime Satomi (2004-current) |
Presidents | Hayao Nakayama (1984-1998) | Shoichiro Irimajiri (1998-2001) | Hideki Sato (2001-2003) | Hisao Oguchi (2003-2008) | Okitane Usui (2008-2012) | Naoya Tsurumi (2012-current) | Hideki Okamura (2014-current) | Haruki Satomi (2015-current) |