Difference between revisions of "NAOMI Universal Cabinet"

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The '''''NAOMI Universal Cabinet''''' is a multi-purpose arcade cabinet manufactured by [[Sega]] in 1999. It is Sega's first "high resolution" arcade cabinet of this type, geared specifically towards (but not limited to) [[Sega NAOMI]] games.
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{{sub-stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' is a multi-purpose arcade cabinet manufactured by [[Sega]] in 1999. It is Sega's first "high resolution" arcade cabinet of this type, geared specifically towards (but not limited to) [[Sega NAOMI]] games.
  
 
The ''NAOMI Universal Cabinet'' makes a number of changes over the previous ''[[Blast City]]'' model, most notably in aesthetics, where less of the unit is devoted to masking CRTs and arcade boards. It is also more customisable and offers a bigger screen.
 
The ''NAOMI Universal Cabinet'' makes a number of changes over the previous ''[[Blast City]]'' model, most notably in aesthetics, where less of the unit is devoted to masking CRTs and arcade boards. It is also more customisable and offers a bigger screen.
  
 
This particular cabinet was designed with both western and Japanese markets in mind, and so is only available in an upright form. It is the de-facto cabinet for a multitude of arcade games during the late 90s and early 2000s, not just for the NAOMI board, but for the [[NAOMI 2]], [[Hikaru]], [[Chihiro]] and [[Triforce]]. The cabinet of choice for Japan, however, became the ''[[Net City]]'', which debuted later in the year.
 
This particular cabinet was designed with both western and Japanese markets in mind, and so is only available in an upright form. It is the de-facto cabinet for a multitude of arcade games during the late 90s and early 2000s, not just for the NAOMI board, but for the [[NAOMI 2]], [[Hikaru]], [[Chihiro]] and [[Triforce]]. The cabinet of choice for Japan, however, became the ''[[Net City]]'', which debuted later in the year.
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==Production credits==
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{{creditstable|
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*[[Masaki Kawabata]], [[Kimio Tsuda]]
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| source=Patents{{ref|1=https://jglobal.jst.go.jp/detail?JGLOBAL_ID=201103055071785818}}
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| console=CAB
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}}
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==Digital manuals==
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<gallery>
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NAOMIUniversal US DigitalWiringDiagram.pdf|US wiring diagram
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</gallery>
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==Promotional material==
 
==Promotional material==
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==Physical scans==
 
==Physical scans==
 
{{ScanArcade
 
{{ScanArcade
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==References==
 
==References==
<references />
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<references/>
  
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{{cabinets}}
 
{{cabinets}}

Latest revision as of 10:16, 18 February 2024

n/a

NAOMIUC Cabinet.jpg
NAOMI Universal Cabinet
Developer:
Release Date RRP Code
Arcade (cabinet)
JP
¥? ?
Arcade (cabinet)
US
$? ?
Arcade (cabinet)
UK
£? ?







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NAOMI Universal Cabinet is a multi-purpose arcade cabinet manufactured by Sega in 1999. It is Sega's first "high resolution" arcade cabinet of this type, geared specifically towards (but not limited to) Sega NAOMI games.

The NAOMI Universal Cabinet makes a number of changes over the previous Blast City model, most notably in aesthetics, where less of the unit is devoted to masking CRTs and arcade boards. It is also more customisable and offers a bigger screen.

This particular cabinet was designed with both western and Japanese markets in mind, and so is only available in an upright form. It is the de-facto cabinet for a multitude of arcade games during the late 90s and early 2000s, not just for the NAOMI board, but for the NAOMI 2, Hikaru, Chihiro and Triforce. The cabinet of choice for Japan, however, became the Net City, which debuted later in the year.

Production credits

Source:
Patents[1]


Digital manuals

Promotional material

Physical scans

Arcade, US
Arcade, JP
Arcade, UK

References


Multi-Purpose Arcade Cabinets Created by Sega
Upright/Sit-down
City (1986) | Aero City (1988) | Swing (1991) | Astro City (1993) | Astro City 2 (1993) | New Astro City (1994) | Blast City (1996) | NAOMI Universal Cabinet (1999) | Net City (1999) | New Net City (xxxx) | Lindbergh Universal Cabinet (2007)
Versus City (1996) | New Versus City (199x)
Large
Megalo 50 (1992) | Super Megalo (1993) | Euro Megalo (199x) | Super Megalo 2 (1994) | Megalo 410 (1996) | NAOMI DX Universal Cabinet (200x)
Cocktail
T-13 (1983) | Aero Table (1988)