Difference between revisions of "Sega Technical Institute"
From Sega Retro
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In addition, ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog 3]]'' and ''[[Sonic & Knuckles]]'' were developed at the STI headquarters, but entirely by [[Sonic Team]] with little STI involvement. | In addition, ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog 3]]'' and ''[[Sonic & Knuckles]]'' were developed at the STI headquarters, but entirely by [[Sonic Team]] with little STI involvement. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==List of staff== | ||
+ | {{StaffList|Sega Technical Institute}} | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 02:13, 25 July 2022
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Sega Technical Institute Division of Sega of America | ||
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Founded: 1990-01 | ||
Defunct: 1996 | ||
Merged into: Sega of America | ||
Headquarters:
|
This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.
Sega Technical Institute was a video game development division of Sega of America which produced a number of the company's first-party video games, most notably the cancelled Sonic X-treme.
Contents
Company
STI developed well-received games such as Die Hard Arcade (the result of a team-up between STI and successful arcade game developers AM1), Comix Zone, Kid Chameleon and The Ooze. STI's focus was to create character properties that could be built into a franchise.
Though the original Sonic the Hedgehog was developed in Japan, Sonic Team moved to the STI headquarters for the development of Sonic the Hedgehog 2, and several STI members assisted in the development of that game. Sonic Team stayed for Sonic the Hedgehog 3 and Sonic & Knuckles but did not seek help from STI for the development of those games.
Following corporate shake-ups and a vision of a more streamlined Sega of America, STI found itself gravitating towards localising Sega's Japanese games, with many of its original products being scrapped. It inevitably merged back into Sega of America.
Game development luminaries Mark Cerny and Stieg Hedlund were at one time part of the organization.
Softography
Arcade
- Tornado (unreleased)
Master System
- Dick Tracy (1991)
Mega Drive
- Dick Tracy (1991)
- Greendog: The Beached Surfer Dude! (1992)
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (1992)
- Kid Chameleon (1992)
- Sonic the Hedgehog Spinball (1993)
- Comix Zone (1995)
- The Ooze (1995)
- Astropede (unreleased)
- Dark Empires (unreleased)
- Jester (unreleased)
- Sonic-16 (unreleased)
- SpellCaster (unreleased)
- Spinny & Spike (unreleased)
- Treasure Tails (unreleased)
Game Gear
32X
- Mars Sample Program (unreleased)
- Sonic Mars (unreleased)
Sega Titan Video
- Die Hard Arcade (1996)
Saturn
- Die Hard Arcade (1997)
- Sonic X-treme (unreleased)
- UFO (unreleased)
Windows PC
- Sonic X-treme (unreleased)
In addition, Sonic the Hedgehog 3 and Sonic & Knuckles were developed at the STI headquarters, but entirely by Sonic Team with little STI involvement.
List of staff
- Alan Ackerman
- Ofer Alon
- Hiroshi Ando
- Takahiro Anto
- Kunitake Aoki
- Tsuneko Aoki
- Jamie Bible
- Mark Cerny
- Scott Chandler
- Fei Cheng
- Christina Coffin
- Betty Cunningham
- Howard Drossin
- John Duggan
- William G. Dunn
- Chris Ebert
- Don Goddard
- Manny Granillo
- Takahiro Hamano
- Ross Harris
- Roger Hector
- Stieg Hedlund
- Takashi Iizuka
- Michael Kosaka
- Tatsuto Kumada
- Mark Kupper
- Dean Lester
- Broderick Macaraeg
- Peter Morawiec
- Robert Morgan
- Toshiyasu Morita
- Yuji Naka
- Alex Niño
- Shigeru Okada
- Tom Payne
- Jason Plumb
- Andrew Probert
- Ken Rose
- Brenda Ross
- Dean Ruggles
- Dave Sanner
- Chris Senn
- Robert Steele
- Adrian Stephens
- Craig Stitt
- Earl Stratton
- Yutaka Sugano
- Marti Thompson
- Makoto Uchida
- Mike Wallis
- Richard Wheeler
- Bill Willis
- Steve Woita
- Yasushi Yamaguchi
- Masanobu Yamamoto
- Hirokazu Yasuhara
- Satoshi Yokokawa
- Takashi Yuda
- Tony De Zuniga
References