Difference between revisions of "Game Factory"

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The Mega Drive Game Factory was the first of its kind (though the concept of using reprogrammable cartridges is as old as the game cartridge itself, as it is a vital tool for cartridge game development), and was initially offered between the 10th and 15th of August 1994{{magref|egm2|1|28}} to ten Blockbuster stores in Columbia, South Carolina. The real plan, however, was to gauge interest in whether the concept would be feasible with the upcoming generation of consoles, namely the [[PlayStation]] and [[Sega Saturn]]. A [[Sega Game Gear]] variant was planned{{magref|egm2|1|28}}, but does not appear to have made it to consumers.
 
The Mega Drive Game Factory was the first of its kind (though the concept of using reprogrammable cartridges is as old as the game cartridge itself, as it is a vital tool for cartridge game development), and was initially offered between the 10th and 15th of August 1994{{magref|egm2|1|28}} to ten Blockbuster stores in Columbia, South Carolina. The real plan, however, was to gauge interest in whether the concept would be feasible with the upcoming generation of consoles, namely the [[PlayStation]] and [[Sega Saturn]]. A [[Sega Game Gear]] variant was planned{{magref|egm2|1|28}}, but does not appear to have made it to consumers.
  
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Revision as of 03:58, 21 January 2023

GameFactory logo.png
Game Factory
Made for: Sega Mega Drive
Manufacturer: NewLeaf Entertainment
Licensor: Blockbuster
Type: Backup tool
Release Date RRP Code
Sega Mega Drive
US

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Game Factory was a rewritable Sega Mega Drive cartridge service run by Blockbuster around late 1994, developed through a collaboration between Sega of America and NewLeaf Entertainment. A novel idea in the world of home rentals, the service was highly ambitious and critically well-received, but suffered from a number of problems and had its subsequent nationwide rollout eventually cancelled.

Service

Manufactured by NewLeaf Entertainment subsidiary Fairway Technologies[1], three different cartridges were available for users to rent games through. Easily most common were the Game Factory-branded green and blue cartridges, equipped with different amounts of internal memory for storing multiple sizes of games.

Cartridges
Code Memory size Description Image
NL101 unknown A NewLeaf Entertainment-branded cartridge with a black label. GameFactory MD NewLeaf cart front.png
NL102 32Mb A Game Factory-branded cartridge with a blue label. GameFactory MD blue cart front.png
NL103 16Mb A Game Factory-branded cartridge with a green label. GameFactory MD Cart Green.jpg

List of flashable games

History

Background

The concept involved customers renting Sega Mega Drive video games stored on reprogrammable flash cartridges. Avoiding the need to stock potentially hundreds, if not thousands of official video game cartridges for rent, Blockbuster could instead use a Game Factory cartridge, flash the contents of a ROM image onto the memory inside, and distribute that instead. When the customer had finished borrowing the game, the cartridge could then be flashed with another ROM image and be recycled for further use[1].

Launch

GameFactory MD cart alt.png

The Mega Drive Game Factory was the first of its kind (though the concept of using reprogrammable cartridges is as old as the game cartridge itself, as it is a vital tool for cartridge game development), and was initially offered between the 10th and 15th of August 1994[1] to ten Blockbuster stores in Columbia, South Carolina. The real plan, however, was to gauge interest in whether the concept would be feasible with the upcoming generation of consoles, namely the PlayStation and Sega Saturn. A Sega Game Gear variant was planned[1], but does not appear to have made it to consumers.

Blockbuster had also tried (and failed) to secure deals for other forms of entertainment, such as VHS videos and music CDs, however despite developing the equipment, big publishers were uneasy with the practise and chose not to license their libraries. Some of these fears were mitigated, however, by Viacom's takeover of Blockbuster in 1993.

Reportedly the entire system originated from reverse-engineering Mega Drive cartridges, as Sega wouldn't put their name to it until a proof of concept was created.

The process of reprogramming a cartridge took roughly 45 seconds on hardware built specifically for Blockbuster. Two types of cartridge were offered; a "green" cartridge which could store up to 16 megabits (2MB) and a "blue" cartridge which could hold 32 megabits (4MB), both using similar plastic shells as normal retail games. The cartridge also devotes an area for a printed label, so that Blockbuster staff could easily keep track of their stock.

Decline

Though apparently a success, the Game Factory service was not rolled out nationwide, nor to other regions of the world where Blockbuster operated. Aside from the fact that Mega Drive sales were on the decline by the end of 1995, Blockbuster and NewLeaf had a hard time keeping up with the demands of new games, which often included extra features that the Game Factory cartridges couldn't accommodate.

For example, having successfully built and tested 16 megabit carts, the firm was hit with the news that Spider-Man and Venom: Maximum Carnage, a game Blockbuster had signed up to promote, would be released on a 32 megabit cartridge. Other games like Sonic & Knuckles and Virtua Racing were likely skipped entirely, and it is not known if there was compatibility with games which required a battery for saving.

Blockbuster also had trouble signing deals with third-party publishers, and so could initially only offer the service for first-party Sega games[1].

The move to optical media and the security features surrounding Saturn and PlayStation video games proved too much of a challenge for the firm, and the service was quietly discontinued at some point in 1995. It is not fully understood what happened to the Game Factory inventory - cartridges have been spotted on online auction sites, and development cartridges have also been seen. Judging by labels the cartridges may have been sold off in the late 1990s, presumably with a specific game flashed into memory.

Legacy

Game Factory cartridges appear to use CR2032 batteries to hold onto data. Should these batteries have died in the last twenty years or more, the cartridge's contents may have been wiped, rendering them unusable.

Magazine articles

Main article: Game Factory/Magazine articles.

Physical scans

Mega Drive, US (16Mb)

GameFactory MD Cart Top Green.jpg
GameFactory MD Cart Back Green.jpgGameFactory MD Cart Green.jpg
Cart
Mega Drive, US (32Mb)

GameFactory MD blue cart front.png
Cart
Mega Drive, US (NewLeaf Entertainment)

GameFactory MD NewLeaf cart front.png
Cart

External links

References