Difference between revisions of "Sega City"
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{{sub-stub}}'''Sega City''' was a chain of video arcades in North America owned by [[Sega]]. Most were opened during the 1990s in shopping malls, and several were converted into [[GameWorks]] venues in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with others being closed. | {{sub-stub}}'''Sega City''' was a chain of video arcades in North America owned by [[Sega]]. Most were opened during the 1990s in shopping malls, and several were converted into [[GameWorks]] venues in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with others being closed. | ||
+ | ==Venues== | ||
==List of venues== | ==List of venues== | ||
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*[[Sega City Mississauga]] (199X) | *[[Sega City Mississauga]] (199X) | ||
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+ | ==History== | ||
+ | ===Background=== | ||
+ | ===Opening=== | ||
+ | ===Decline=== | ||
+ | ===GameWorks=== | ||
+ | {{MainArticle|GameWorks}} | ||
==Images== | ==Images== |
Revision as of 00:16, 28 November 2021
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Sega City was a chain of video arcades in North America owned by Sega. Most were opened during the 1990s in shopping malls, and several were converted into GameWorks venues in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with others being closed.
Contents
Venues
List of venues
- Sega City Indianapolis (1995)
- Sega City Cedar Park (1995)
- Sega City Irvine (1995)
- Sega City Lone Tree (1996)
- Sega City Albuquerque (1997)
- Sega City Baltimore (199X)
- Sega City San Jose (199X)
- Sega City Mississauga (199X)
History
Background
Opening
Decline
GameWorks
- Main article: GameWorks.