Difference between revisions of "Sega City"

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{{stub-stub}}'''Sega City''' was a chain of video arcades in North America owned by [[Sega]]. Most were opened during the 1990s in shopping malls, and several were converted into [[GameWorks]] venues in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with others being closed.
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[[File:Sega City logo.png|thumb|200px|right]]
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{{OtherPage|desc=the arcade cabinet|page=City}}
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{{sub-stub}}'''Sega City''' was a chain of video arcades in North America operated by [[Sega Enterprises]]. Most were opened during the 1990s in shopping malls, and several were converted into [[GameWorks]] venues in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with others being closed.
  
==Venues==
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==List of Sega-owned venues==
===USA===
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===United States===
 
<gallery widths="320" heights="240">
 
<gallery widths="320" heights="240">
SegaCity Irvine Inside.jpg|Irvine Spectrum Center, 31 Fortune Dr, Irvine, California 92618 (opened 1995-11-28)*
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GameWorksStudio US Indianapolis.jpg|[[Sega City Indianapolis]] (Indianapolis, Indiana) (1995)
Notavailable.svg|Park Meadows Mall, Lone Tree, Colorado (opened August 1996)*
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Notavailable.svg|[[Sega City Cedar Park]] (Cedar Park, Texas) (1995)
Notavailable.svg|Golden Ring Mall, Baltimore, Maryland
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SegaCity Irvine Inside.jpg|[[Sega City Irvine]] (Irvine, California) (1995)
Notavailable.svg|San Jose Pavilions, San Jose, California
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Notavailable.svg|[[Sega City Lone Tree]] (Lone Tree, Colorado) (1996)
Notavailable.svg|Cottonwood Mall, Albuquerque, New Mexico (opened 1997-03-28?)
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Notavailable.svg|[[Sega City Albuquerque]] (Albuquerque, New Mexico) (1997)
Notavailable.svg|Circle Centre, Indianapolis, Indiana (opened 1995-09-08)*
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Notavailable.svg|[[Sega City Baltimore]] (Baltimore, Maryland) (199x)
Notavailable.svg|Lakeline Mall, Cedar Park, Texas(opened 1995-10-18)*
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Notavailable.svg|[[Sega City San Jose]] (San Jose, California) (199x)
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
''*Indicates locations that became GameWorks.''
 
  
 
===Canada===
 
===Canada===
 
<gallery widths="320" heights="240">
 
<gallery widths="320" heights="240">
Notavailable.svg|99 Rathburn Rd W Mississauga, ON L5B 4C1, Canada
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SegaCity ThePlaydium interior 1.png|[[Sega City The Playdium]] (Mississauga, Ontario) (1996)
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
==Gallery==
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===Malaysia===
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Open in August 1997 by Super Merge Corp Sdn Bhd, a joint venture between Sega Japan, Pakatan Antara Sdn Bhd and Mitsui Ltd<ref>New Straits Times 1997-05-06 Multimedia Theme Park To Open August</ref>.
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<gallery widths="320" heights="240">
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Notavailable.svg|[[Sega City Malaysia]] (1997)
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</gallery>
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==Images==
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
 
File:SegaCity Coin Head.jpg|Token (heads)
 
File:SegaCity Coin Head.jpg|Token (heads)
 
File:SegaCity Coin Tail.jpg|Token (tails)
 
File:SegaCity Coin Tail.jpg|Token (tails)
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SegaCity Coin Head alt.jpg|Token, alt (heads)
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SegaCity Coin Tail alt.jpg|Token, alt (tails)
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
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<references/>
 
<references/>
 
{{clear}}
 
{{clear}}
{{SegaCityOmni}}
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{{SegaVenuesUSA}}
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{{SegaVenuesCanada}}
 
[[Category:Venues in the United States]]
 
[[Category:Venues in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 13:38, 3 July 2024

Sega City logo.png
For the arcade cabinet, see City.

This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.


Sega City was a chain of video arcades in North America operated by Sega Enterprises. Most were opened during the 1990s in shopping malls, and several were converted into GameWorks venues in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with others being closed.

List of Sega-owned venues

United States

Canada

Malaysia

Open in August 1997 by Super Merge Corp Sdn Bhd, a joint venture between Sega Japan, Pakatan Antara Sdn Bhd and Mitsui Ltd[1].

Images

References

  1. New Straits Times 1997-05-06 Multimedia Theme Park To Open August


Sega-related venues in the United States
GameWorks
Seattle (1997) | Las Vegas (1997) | Ontario (1997) | Grapevine (1997) | Tempe (1997) | Auburn Hills (1998) | Orange County (1998) | Miami (1999) | Sawgrass Mills (1999) | Chicago (1999) | Columbus (1999) | Irvine (1999) | Lone Tree (199x) | Tampa (2000) | Newport (2002) | Minneapolis (2002) | Long Beach (2003) | Las Vegas at Town Square (201x)
GameWorks Studio
Austin (199x) | City of Industry (199x) | Daytona (199x) | Henderson (199x) | Indianapolis (199x) | Kansas City (199x) | Littleton (199x) | Orlando (199x) | Philadelphia (199x) | San Antonio (199x) | Tucson (199x)
Sega City
Indianapolis (1995) | Cedar Park (1995) | Irvine (1995) | Lone Tree (1996) | Albuquerque (1997) | Baltimore (199x) | San Jose (199x)
Kingdom of Oz
Westminster Mall (19xx) | West Covina Fashion Plaza (19xx) | Puente Hills Mall (19xx) | Old Towne (19xx) | Tanforan Shopping Center (19xx)
Sega Center
Anaheim Plaza (19xx) | Carson Mall (19xx) | Fashion Valley Shopping Center (19xx) | Fox Hills Mall (19xx) | Los Cerritos Center (19xx) | Montclair Plaza (19xx) | Puente Hills Mall (19xx) | Sherman Oaks Galleria (19xx) | Tanforan Shopping Center (19xx)
Sega's Time-Out
Fox Hills Mall (19xx) | Golden Ring Mall (19xx) | Great Northern Mall (19xx) | Time-Out on the Court (19xx)
Sega Station
Boulder Station (1997) | Kansas City (1997) | Sunset Station (1997)
World Sports Grille
Tucson (2008) | Seattle (200x) | Detroit (20xx)
P.J. Pizzazz
Eastland Center (1980) | Garden Grove (1982) | Puente Hills Mall (1982)
Others
Game City (1992) | Grand Slam Canyon (1993) | Midway (1993) | Sega VirtuaLand (1993) | Innoventions (1994) | Sega Speedway (1995) | Stage 35 (xxxx) | Sega Sports at Centerfield (2000)
Sega-related venues in Canada
Sega City
The Playdium (1996)