Difference between revisions of "DISAM S.A. de C.V."
From Sega Retro
m |
|||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
== Relations with Sega == | == Relations with Sega == | ||
− | Not much is known about when this company was founded, but in early 1990s it became the main distributor of the Sega consoles in Mexican territory. The company sold [[Sega Master System]] model I and II, [[Sega Mega Drive]] (Genesis), [[Sega Game Gear]], [[Sega Mega CD]] and [[Sega 32X]] | + | Not much is known about when this company was founded, but in early 1990s it became the main distributor of the Sega consoles in Mexican territory. The company sold [[Sega Master System]] model I and II, [[Sega Mega Drive]] (Genesis), [[Sega Game Gear]], [[Sega Mega CD]] and [[Sega 32X]]. |
It is worth mentioning that many of the Sega games in Mexican territory were the US versions, however when the Master System arrived, titles in Spanish imported from the PAL versions with Spanish manuals were also distributed to save costs and translations similar to the case of Portugal with [[Tectoy]] games.<ref>http://www.smspower.org/forums/15992-SMSInMexico</ref> | It is worth mentioning that many of the Sega games in Mexican territory were the US versions, however when the Master System arrived, titles in Spanish imported from the PAL versions with Spanish manuals were also distributed to save costs and translations similar to the case of Portugal with [[Tectoy]] games.<ref>http://www.smspower.org/forums/15992-SMSInMexico</ref> |
Revision as of 16:53, 22 November 2022
This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.
Distribuidora De Articulos Modernos S.A. de C.V/Sega Mexico (DISAM) was the company that first introduced Sega consoles in Mexico
Relations with Sega
Not much is known about when this company was founded, but in early 1990s it became the main distributor of the Sega consoles in Mexican territory. The company sold Sega Master System model I and II, Sega Mega Drive (Genesis), Sega Game Gear, Sega Mega CD and Sega 32X.
It is worth mentioning that many of the Sega games in Mexican territory were the US versions, however when the Master System arrived, titles in Spanish imported from the PAL versions with Spanish manuals were also distributed to save costs and translations similar to the case of Portugal with Tectoy games.[1]