Difference between revisions of "Umeda Joypolis"

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{{VenueBob
 
{{VenueBob
 
| logo=Joypolis logo gradient.svg
 
| logo=Joypolis logo gradient.svg
| venueimage=Joypolis Osaka.jpg
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| venueimage=Umeda Joypolis Exterior 2018.jpg
 
| name=Umeda Joypolis
 
| name=Umeda Joypolis
| location=Umeda, Osaka, Japan
+
| location=大阪市北区角田町5-15,「HEP FIVE」, 8F・9F, Japan
 
| opened=1998-11-28{{ref|https://segaretro.org/Press_release:_1998-09-24:_Osaka_ni_Umeda_Joypolis_Toujou}}
 
| opened=1998-11-28{{ref|https://segaretro.org/Press_release:_1998-09-24:_Osaka_ni_Umeda_Joypolis_Toujou}}
 
| closed=2018-05-06{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20180212001407/http://umeda-joypolis.sega.jp/close.html}}
 
| closed=2018-05-06{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20180212001407/http://umeda-joypolis.sega.jp/close.html}}
 
}}
 
}}
{{sub-stub}}
+
'''Umeda Joypolis''' (梅田ジョイポリス) was a [[Joypolis]] indoor amusement theme park opened by [[Sega]]. Located on the eighth and ninth floors of the Hep Five shopping centre in Osaka and one of the original tenants on its day of opening, it was the eighth and final Joypolis venue to be opened in the 1990s and would subsequently go on to become one of the longest running ones, later closing permanently in May 2018.  
'''Umeda Joypolis''' (梅田 ジョイポリス) in Osaka was a [[Joypolis]] indoor amusement theme park. Located on the 8th and 9th floors of the HEP FIVE shopping centre in Osaka, it was the eighth and final Joypolis venue to be opened in the 1990s, later closing in May 2018.  
 
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
 +
The eighth and final original Joypolis park created by Sega, Umeda Joypolis opened on 28 November 1998 alongside 150 other tenants in the Hep Five shopping centre, Umeda, Osaka.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991008030618/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/umeda/hepfive.html}} Themed around the concept of "Underworld", a fictional urban complex, the venue initially featured four newly-developed attractions at that time exclusive to the park, ''[[Drift Cart]]'', ''[[Fortune Cave]]'', ''[[Dennou Senki Virtual-On Special]]'', and an upgraded ''[[AS-1]]'' simulator under the name of ''[[AS-MAX]]''{{ref|https://segaretro.org/Press_release:_1998-09-24:_Osaka_ni_Umeda_Joypolis_Toujou}}; the latter two were removed within months, with the Virtual-On Special units relocated to [[Shinjuku Joypolis]].
  
Umeda Joypolis opened on 28 November 1998. Originally planned to be the debut location of [[Dennou Senki Virtual-On Special]], as well as an unreleased upgraded version of the [[AS-1]] known as AS-MAX{{ref|https://segaretro.org/Press_release:_1998-09-24:_Osaka_ni_Umeda_Joypolis_Toujou}}, plans for these were scrapped back in the months leading up to its launch, with it instead housing a standard AS-1 unit and new attractions such as [[Drift Cart]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991009084237/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/driftc.html}} and [[Fortune Cave]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20000820143715/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/fortunec.html}}; Virtual-On Special would later be debuted at [[Shinjuku Joypolis]] in April the following year.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991011025733/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/virtualon.html}}
+
Alongside [[Tokyo Joypolis]] and [[Okayama Joypolis]], the venue survived the wide-scale closures of many game centres by Sega during the early 2000s that included several Joypolis parks. In the following years it would receive less frequent updates than the flagship Tokyo branch, became the only venue other than it in Japan to house attractions developed by Sega after the removal of Okayama's in 2008, and would later be largely targeted towards young women, containing what was at one stage the largest Purikura photo booth facilities in Japan, "P+closet".{{ref|https://p-closet.sega.jp/}}
  
Alongside [[Tokyo Joypolis]] and [[Okayama Joypolis]], the venue survived the wide-scale closures of many game centres by Sega during the early 2000s that included several Joypolis parks. It received less frequent updates than the flagship Tokyo branch, becoming the only venue other than it in Japan to house attractions developed by Sega after the removal of Okayama's in 2008, and would later be largely targeted towards young women, containing what was at one stage the largest Purikura photo booth facilities in Japan, P+ Closet.{{ref|https://www.trendhunter.com/trends/pcloset}}
+
Later attractions installed included special editions of ''[[Let's Go Jungle!]]'' and ''[[The House of the Dead 4]]'', as well as VR horror simulator ''[[Enigma Sphere]]''. The venue was included in the majority stake acquisition of [[Sega Live Creation]] by China Animations Character Co in 2016, initially operating as normal after it came into effect the following year. Subsequently, the lease on its space expired just under 20 years after opening, and the park closed permanently on 6 May 2018, leaving Tokyo Joypolis as the final original Joypolis indoor theme park (with the exception of the downsized Okayama game centre location).{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20180212001407/http://umeda-joypolis.sega.jp/close.html}}
  
Later attractions installed included the hang-gliding simulator [[Sky Cruising]] and VR horror simulator [[Enigma Sphere]]. The venue was included in the majority stake acquisition of [[Sega Live Creation]] by China Animations Character Co in 2016, operating as normal after it was completed. The lease on its space expired just under 20 years after opening, and the park closed permanently on 6 May 2018, leaving Tokyo Joypolis as the final original Joypolis indoor theme park besides the downsized Okayama site, which closed shortly afterwards in September 2018.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20180212001407/http://umeda-joypolis.sega.jp/close.html}} Its space is now largely occupied by a VR Zone venue managed by [[Taito]].
+
Its space was later largely occupied by a VR Zone venue managed by [[Namco]].{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20201101024220/https://vrzone-pic.com/osaka/}} Currently, the unit is home to the Bandai Namco Cross Store, which retains some arcade games on one of the floors.
  
 
==Attractions==
 
==Attractions==
 +
===Original attractions===
 
{{multicol|
 
{{multicol|
*[[Wild River]]
+
*''[[Wild River]]'' (1998-11-28 - 2006-07-07)
*[[Drift Cart]]
+
*''[[Drift Cart]]'' (1998-11-28 - 2002-06-xx)
*[[Murder Lodge]]
+
*''[[Murder Lodge]]'' (1998-11-28 - 200x-xx-xx)
*[[AS-1]]
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*''[[Dennou Senki Virtual-On Special]]'' (1998-11-28 - 1999-04-01)
*[[The Lost World: Jurassic Park Special]]
+
*''[[AS-1|AS-MAX]]'' (1998-11-28 - 2000-0x-xx)
*[[The Horror House from Hollywood]]
+
*''[[Fortune Cave]]'' (1998-11-28 - 2004-06-xx)
*[[Sky Cruising]]
+
*''[[The Lost World: Jurassic Park Special]]'' (1998-11-28 - 2007-07-07)
*[[Let's Go Jungle!|Let's Go Jungle! Special]]
+
}}
*[[The House of the Dead 4|The House of the Dead 4 Special]]
+
===Later attractions===
*[[Ace Attorney in Joypolis]]
+
{{multicol|
*[[Haunted House of  Art Craftman Yoshiaki Kamimura]]
+
*''[[Sky Cruising]]'' (1999-10-22 - 2018-05-06)
*[[Enigma Sphere]]
+
*''[[The House of the Dead 4|The House of the Dead 4 Special]]'' (2006-07-08 - 2007-07-17)
*[[The Room of Living Doll]]
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*''[[Wild River#Wild River Splash|Wild River Splash!]]'' (2006-07-08 - 2016-02-17)
 +
*''[[Let's Go Jungle!|Let's Go Jungle! Special]]'' (2007-07-21 - 2018-05-06)
 +
*''[[Lola and Carla the Beauty Contest]]'' (2010-12-22 - 2018-05-06)
 +
*''[[Wild River#Wild River The Treasure Hunt|Wild River The Treasure Hunt]]'' (2016-02-19 - 2018-05-06)
 +
*''[[Ace Attorney in Joypolis]]'' (2016-05-03 - 2018-05-06)
 
}}
 
}}
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
 +
===1998-2010===
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
 +
Umeda_Interior_1998.jpg|Interior circa 1998
 +
Umeda_Interior_19982.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Interior_19983.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Interior_19984.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Interior_19985.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Interior_19986.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Arcade_1998.jpg|Arcade area
 +
Umeda_Arcade_19982.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Arcade_19983.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Arcade_19984.jpg|
 +
Umeda_VirtualOn_Special.jpg|''Virtual-On Special''
 +
Umeda_Drift_Cart.jpg|''Drift Cart''
 +
Umeda_Drift.jpg
 +
Umeda_Drift2.jpg
 +
Umeda_Drift3.jpg
 +
Joypolis_Osaka.jpg|Exterior in 2000s
 +
Umeda_Back_2000s.jpg|Side façade in early 2000s
 +
Umeda_Back_2008.jpg|Alternate entrance in 2008
 +
Umeda_Entrance_2008.jpg|Entrance in 2008
 +
Umeda_Floors_2008.jpg|2008 floor guide
 +
Umeda_Arcade_2008.jpg|Arcade in 2008
 +
</gallery>
  
 +
===2010-2018===
 +
<gallery>
 +
Umeda_Sky_Cruising_2010.jpg|Sky Cruising attraction in 2010
 +
Umeda_Arcade_2014.jpg|Arcade in 2014
 +
Umeda_Wild_River_Splash.jpg|''Wild River Splash!''
 +
Umeda_Purikura.jpg|Purikura booths
 +
Umeda_Tickets.jpg|2010s tickets
 +
Umeda_Jungle.jpg|''Let's Go Jungle! Special''
 +
Enigma_Sphere_2016.jpg|''Enigma Sphere'' in 2016
 +
Enigma_Sphere_20162.jpg
 +
Enigma_Sphere_20163.jpg
 +
Enigma_Sphere_20164.jpg
 +
Umeda_Wild_River.jpg|''Wild River The Treasure Hunt''
 +
Umeda_Wild_River2.jpg|
 +
Umeda_Exterior_2018.jpg|Exterior in 2018
 +
Umeda_Exterior_20182.jpg
 +
Umeda_Interior_9F_2018.jpg|Interior in 2018
 +
Umeda_Execution_2018.jpg|''Execution'' [[Funteraction]] machine in 2018
 +
Umeda_Theme_2018.jpg|Intact original theming
 +
Umeda_Theme_20182.jpg
 +
Umeda_Theme_20183.jpg
 +
Umeda_Theme_20184.jpg
 +
Umeda_Sign_2018.jpg|Closing day sign
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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==Promotional material==
 
==Promotional material==
 +
{{gitem|Umeda Joypolis CM 98.mp4|Pre-opening advert}}
 +
<gallery>
 +
Umeda Joypolis Poster.jpg|1998 poster advertisement
 +
</gallery>
 +
==External links==
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 10:53, 10 January 2024

Joypolis logo gradient.svg
Umeda Joypolis Exterior 2018.jpg
Umeda Joypolis
Location: 大阪市北区角田町5-15,「HEP FIVE」, 8F・9F, Japan
Opened: 1998-11-28[1]
Closed: 2018-05-06[2]

Umeda Joypolis (梅田ジョイポリス) was a Joypolis indoor amusement theme park opened by Sega. Located on the eighth and ninth floors of the Hep Five shopping centre in Osaka and one of the original tenants on its day of opening, it was the eighth and final Joypolis venue to be opened in the 1990s and would subsequently go on to become one of the longest running ones, later closing permanently in May 2018.

History

The eighth and final original Joypolis park created by Sega, Umeda Joypolis opened on 28 November 1998 alongside 150 other tenants in the Hep Five shopping centre, Umeda, Osaka.[3] Themed around the concept of "Underworld", a fictional urban complex, the venue initially featured four newly-developed attractions at that time exclusive to the park, Drift Cart, Fortune Cave, Dennou Senki Virtual-On Special, and an upgraded AS-1 simulator under the name of AS-MAX[1]; the latter two were removed within months, with the Virtual-On Special units relocated to Shinjuku Joypolis.

Alongside Tokyo Joypolis and Okayama Joypolis, the venue survived the wide-scale closures of many game centres by Sega during the early 2000s that included several Joypolis parks. In the following years it would receive less frequent updates than the flagship Tokyo branch, became the only venue other than it in Japan to house attractions developed by Sega after the removal of Okayama's in 2008, and would later be largely targeted towards young women, containing what was at one stage the largest Purikura photo booth facilities in Japan, "P+closet".[4]

Later attractions installed included special editions of Let's Go Jungle! and The House of the Dead 4, as well as VR horror simulator Enigma Sphere. The venue was included in the majority stake acquisition of Sega Live Creation by China Animations Character Co in 2016, initially operating as normal after it came into effect the following year. Subsequently, the lease on its space expired just under 20 years after opening, and the park closed permanently on 6 May 2018, leaving Tokyo Joypolis as the final original Joypolis indoor theme park (with the exception of the downsized Okayama game centre location).[2]

Its space was later largely occupied by a VR Zone venue managed by Namco.[5] Currently, the unit is home to the Bandai Namco Cross Store, which retains some arcade games on one of the floors.

Attractions

Original attractions

Later attractions

Gallery

1998-2010

2010-2018

Magazine articles

Main article: Umeda Joypolis/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

External links

References


Joypolis venues
Current
Tokyo Joypolis (1996) | Shanghai Joypolis (2014) | Qingdao Joypolis (2015)
Former
Shinjuku Joypolis (1996-2000) | Niigata Joypolis (1995-2001) | Yokohama Joypolis (1994-2001) | Fukuoka Joypolis (1996-2001) | Kyoto Joypolis (1997-2002) | Umeda Joypolis (1998-2018) | Okayama Joypolis (1998-2018) | Joypolis VR Shibuya (2018-2020)