Difference between revisions of "Sega R&D2 (2011-2015)"
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{{stub}}'''R&D Dept. #2''' (第二研究開発本部) was the second arcade division of [[Sega Corporation (2000-2015)|Sega]], succeeding [[Sega AM2 (2004-2011)|Sega AM2]], just with the Amusement (AM) moniker dropped. When [[Sega Interactive (Japan)|Sega Interactive]] was founded in 2015, it was incorporated into the new company. | {{stub}}'''R&D Dept. #2''' (第二研究開発本部) was the second arcade division of [[Sega Corporation (2000-2015)|Sega]], succeeding [[Sega AM2 (2004-2011)|Sega AM2]], just with the Amusement (AM) moniker dropped. When [[Sega Interactive (Japan)|Sega Interactive]] was founded in 2015, it was incorporated into the new company. | ||
− | R&D2 continued many of AM2’s arcade projects, such as ''[[:category:MJ|Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ]]'', ''[[Border Break]]'' and ''[[Shining Force Cross]]'' (though did not continue the ''[[:category:Virtua Fighter (franchise)|Virtua Fighter]]'' series), and continued its consumer efforts, working with [[Sega CS3 (2008- | + | R&D2 continued many of AM2’s arcade projects, such as ''[[:category:MJ|Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ]]'', ''[[Border Break]]'' and ''[[Shining Force Cross]]'' (though did not continue the ''[[:category:Virtua Fighter (franchise)|Virtua Fighter]]'' series), and continued its consumer efforts, working with [[Sega CS3 (2008-2015)|Sega CS3]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20210630105354/https://twitter.com/Mazin__/status/1410189810984120323}} to develop consumer entries in the ''Project DIVA'' series. It also continued porting arcade games [[Xbox 360]] and [[PlayStation 3]] up until 2013 with the release of ''[[Virtua Striker]]''. |
Its new development was to expand into the mobile video game market, beginning with established IPs such as ''[[Virtua Tennis Challenge]]''. It later began creating properties specifically for mobile, with ''[[Squads: Saikyou no Kizuna]]'', as well as ''[[Soul Reverse Zero]]'', released after R&D2 became part of Sega Interactive. | Its new development was to expand into the mobile video game market, beginning with established IPs such as ''[[Virtua Tennis Challenge]]''. It later began creating properties specifically for mobile, with ''[[Squads: Saikyou no Kizuna]]'', as well as ''[[Soul Reverse Zero]]'', released after R&D2 became part of Sega Interactive. |
Latest revision as of 09:49, 2 February 2024
Sega R&D2 (2011-2015) Division of Sega | ||
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Founded: 2011 | ||
Defunct: 2015-04-01 | ||
Headquarters:
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2011 2015-04-01
← Sega AM2
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This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.
R&D Dept. #2 (第二研究開発本部) was the second arcade division of Sega, succeeding Sega AM2, just with the Amusement (AM) moniker dropped. When Sega Interactive was founded in 2015, it was incorporated into the new company.
R&D2 continued many of AM2’s arcade projects, such as Sega Network Taisen Mahjong MJ, Border Break and Shining Force Cross (though did not continue the Virtua Fighter series), and continued its consumer efforts, working with Sega CS3[1] to develop consumer entries in the Project DIVA series. It also continued porting arcade games Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 up until 2013 with the release of Virtua Striker.
Its new development was to expand into the mobile video game market, beginning with established IPs such as Virtua Tennis Challenge. It later began creating properties specifically for mobile, with Squads: Saikyou no Kizuna, as well as Soul Reverse Zero, released after R&D2 became part of Sega Interactive.
R&D2 itself contained 2 development departments: Dept. 1 created arcade games such as Border Break and Shining Force Cross[2]; Dept. 2 is known to have handled console games such as Project DIVA[3].
Contents
Softography
Xbox 360
- Dead or Alive 5 (2012)
- Virtua Fighter 5: Final Showdown (2012)
- Sonic the Fighters (2012)
- Dead or Alive 5 Ultimate (2013)
- Virtua Striker (2013)
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2015)
PlayStation 3
- Virtua Fighter 5: Final Showdown (2012)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Dreamy Theater extend (2012)
- Dead or Alive 5 (2012)
- Sonic the Fighters (2012)
- Dead or Alive 5 Ultimate (2013)
- Virtua Striker (2013)
- Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA F (2013)
- Dead or Alive 5+ & Dead or Alive 5 (2013)
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2013)
RingEdge 2
- Dead or Alive 5 Ultimate (2013)
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2015)
Nintendo 3DS
- Hatsune Miku and Future Stars Project mirai (2012)
- Hatsune Miku: Project Mirai 2 (2013)
- Hatsune Miku: Project Mirai DX (2015)
PlayStation Vita
- Dead or Alive 5+ (2013)
- Dead or Alive 5+ & Dead or Alive 5 (2013)
Nu
Nu 1.1
- KanColle Arcade (2016)
PlayStation 4
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2015)
Xbox One
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2015)
PlayStation Now
- Dead or Alive 5 Ultimate (2015)
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2016)
Steam
- Dead or Alive 5 Last Round (2015)
Android
- Virtua Tennis Challenge (2012)
- MJ Mobile (2014)
- Squads: Saikyou no Kizuna (2015)
iOS
- Virtua Tennis Challenge (2012)
- MJ Mobile (2013)
- Squads: Saikyou no Kizuna (2015)
List of staff
- Keisuke Tsukahara (composer)
- Tatsuya Sato (Sega)
- Eisuke Abe
- Satoshi Andou
- Seiji Aoki
- Kazuaki Arahori
- Masataka Arai
- Takanori Daito
- Yusaku Egami
- Nobuyuki Eguchi
- Saori Furutani
- Shinichi Goto
- Seiichi Hamada
- Takayuki Haneda
- Ayami Hasegawa
- Katsuya Hiraoka
- Takashi Hirayama
- Masahide Hiroike
- Ayano Hori
- Hitoshi Iizawa
- Kimihiro Ikami
- Toru Ikebuchi
- Yasuyuki Inomata
- Toshiya Inoue
- Fumio Ito
- Haruna Ito
- Kensuke Ito
- Yoshinari Itoh
- Hajime Itou
- Takeshi Iwasaki
- Hiroshi Kandou
- Kenji Kanno
- Yoshiki Kanoh
- Daichi Katagiri
- Hiroshi Kataoka
- Hideki Kawamura
- Shinya Kitagawa
- Tetsu Koyama
- Mie Kumagai
- Shigetaka Kyoya
- Munekazu Makino
- Takuji Masuda
- Kota Matsumoto
- Keiichi Matsunami
- Junichiro Matsuura
- Yusuke Matsuyama
- Dai Matsuzaki
- Hiroshi Michikami
- Takehiko Mikami
- Junpei Mishima
- Haruka Miura
- You Momotani
- Kazuya Morita
- Rie Murai
- Takayuki Muramatsu
- Tohru Murayama
- Tsuguharu Nagasawa
- Kenji Nagashima
- Yasuyuki Nagata
- Takuya Nagayasu
- Kayo Nakamura
- Makoto Nakamura
- Tatsutoshi Narita
- Kouichi Noguchi
- Kouhei Nosaki
- Minori Oda
- Makoto Osaki
- Hidehito Sakuma
- Masanori Sakurai
- Fuminori Sato
- Masanori Sato
- Shungo Seki
- Ryo Shibasaki
- Michi Shibuya
- Asami Shimada
- Shinya Shimada
- Noriyuki Shimoda
- Hiroaki Shoji
- Shingo Sudo
- Yutaka Sudo
- Tetsuya Sugimoto
- Masayuki Sumi
- Hiroshi Suzuki
- Kozue Suzuki
- Masatomo Suzuki
- Yoshifumi Suzuki
- Motoshi Takabe
- Kazuki Takagi
- Genta Takahashi
- Masayuki Takahashi
- Daisuke Takahata
- Megumi Takano
- Hajime Take
- Yohsuke Takeda
- Ayumi Tanaka
- Hideki Tanaka
- Dai Tsuchiya
- Koujou Tsukamoto
- Shintaro Tsukamoto
- Naonori Watanabe
- Takeshi Yamaguchi
- Junichi Yamanaka
- Takeshi Yamanouchi
- Masaki Yano
- Daisuke Yonezawa
- Shinichi Yoshino
References
- ↑ @Mazin__ on Twitter (Wayback Machine: 2021-06-30 10:53)
- ↑ https://www.4gamer.net/games/361/G036113/20180412074/ (Wayback Machine: 2023-11-12 04:15)
- ↑ https://mantan-web.jp/article/20131130dog00m200038000c.html (Wayback Machine: 2019-05-18 19:39)
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