Difference between revisions of "Sega Interactive R&D3"

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'''R&D Div. #3''' (第三研究開発本部 開発一部) was the first third division of [[Sega Interactive (Japan)|Sega Interactive]]. It was spun out of [[Sega R&D1 (2011-2015)|Sega R&D1]]. It is unclear exactly when it was founded, but it seems to have coincided with the founding of Sega Interactive. The earliest recorded public mention of its existence came in November 2015.{{ref|https://www.4gamer.net/games/000/G000000/20151211081/}}
 
'''R&D Div. #3''' (第三研究開発本部 開発一部) was the first third division of [[Sega Interactive (Japan)|Sega Interactive]]. It was spun out of [[Sega R&D1 (2011-2015)|Sega R&D1]]. It is unclear exactly when it was founded, but it seems to have coincided with the founding of Sega Interactive. The earliest recorded public mention of its existence came in November 2015.{{ref|https://www.4gamer.net/games/000/G000000/20151211081/}}
  
R&D3 acted as a spiritual successor to [[Sega AM3 (2005-2008)|Sega AM3]], which had merged with [[Sega AM1 (2005-2011)|AM1]] in 2008. However, it was not a direct replica, as various former AM3 staff remained at R&D1, as did their former franchise ''[[:category:Initial D|Initial D Arcade Stage]]''. Instead, it carried over former AM3 franchise ''[[:category:World Club Champion Football|World Club Champion Football]]'', and R&D1’s new franchises ''[[:category:maimai (franchise)|maimai]]''{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20160617144453/http://sega-interactive.co.jp/special/interview/vol3-1}} and ''[[Wonderland Wars]]''{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20170928084256/https://sega-interactive.co.jp/special/interview/vol14-2/}}.
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R&D3 acted as a spiritual successor to [[Sega AM3 (2005-2008)|Sega AM3]], which had merged with [[Sega AM1 (2005-2011)|AM1]] in 2008. However, it was not a direct replica, as various former AM3 staff remained at [[Sega Interactive R&D1|R&D1]], as did their former franchise ''[[:category:Initial D|Initial D Arcade Stage]]'' (although there is very little public evidence to confirm or deny this). Instead, it carried over former AM3 franchise ''[[:category:World Club Champion Football|World Club Champion Football]]'', and R&D1’s new franchises ''[[:category:maimai (franchise)|maimai]]''{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20160617144453/http://sega-interactive.co.jp/special/interview/vol3-1}} and ''[[Wonderland Wars]]''{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20170928084256/https://sega-interactive.co.jp/special/interview/vol14-2/}}.
  
 
R&D3 was best known for its trio of rhythm game series: the afore-mentioned ''maimai'', ''[[Chunithm]]'' (conceived at R&D1) and the brand new ''[[Ongeki]]''. This naturally led to the department's sound section being the best-known for all R&D departments, especially as one of its members was [[Takenobu Mitsuyoshi]]. R&D3 overall mostly maintained and updated existing series, with ''Ongeki'' and the retooled ''[[WCCF Footista 2019|WCCF Footista]]'' being the closest the department had to brand new games.
 
R&D3 was best known for its trio of rhythm game series: the afore-mentioned ''maimai'', ''[[Chunithm]]'' (conceived at R&D1) and the brand new ''[[Ongeki]]''. This naturally led to the department's sound section being the best-known for all R&D departments, especially as one of its members was [[Takenobu Mitsuyoshi]]. R&D3 overall mostly maintained and updated existing series, with ''Ongeki'' and the retooled ''[[WCCF Footista 2019|WCCF Footista]]'' being the closest the department had to brand new games.
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==List of staff==
 
==List of staff==
{{StaffList|Sega Interactive R&D1}}
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{{StaffList|Sega Interactive R&D3}}
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 23:59, 17 December 2023

Notavailable.svg
Sega Interactive R&D3
Division of Sega Interactive
Founded: 2015-04-01
Defunct: 2020-04-01
Headquarters:
Japan
2015-04-01
2020-04-01

R&D Div. #3 (第三研究開発本部 開発一部) was the first third division of Sega Interactive. It was spun out of Sega R&D1. It is unclear exactly when it was founded, but it seems to have coincided with the founding of Sega Interactive. The earliest recorded public mention of its existence came in November 2015.[1]

R&D3 acted as a spiritual successor to Sega AM3, which had merged with AM1 in 2008. However, it was not a direct replica, as various former AM3 staff remained at R&D1, as did their former franchise Initial D Arcade Stage (although there is very little public evidence to confirm or deny this). Instead, it carried over former AM3 franchise World Club Champion Football, and R&D1’s new franchises maimai[2] and Wonderland Wars[3].

R&D3 was best known for its trio of rhythm game series: the afore-mentioned maimai, Chunithm (conceived at R&D1) and the brand new Ongeki. This naturally led to the department's sound section being the best-known for all R&D departments, especially as one of its members was Takenobu Mitsuyoshi. R&D3 overall mostly maintained and updated existing series, with Ongeki and the retooled WCCF Footista being the closest the department had to brand new games.

It was merged with Sega Games in 2020, becoming a new department in the 5th Development Div. of Sega Asia & Japan Studio HQ.

Sections

  • Planning Development Section (企画開発セクション)[2]
  • Sound Section (サウンドセクション)[4][5][6]

Softography

List of staff

References


Timeline of Sega of Japan research and development divisions








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