Difference between revisions of "Sega Enterprises USA"
From Sega Retro
Hyperspeed34 (talk | contribs) |
|||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
| mergedwith= | | mergedwith= | ||
| mergedinto=[[Sega of America]] (2008) | | mergedinto=[[Sega of America]] (2008) | ||
− | | headquarters=2149 Paragon Drive, San Jose, California 95131, United States | + | | headquarters=275 Shoreline Drive, Suite 201, Redwood City, California 94065, United States{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19970216123013/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega_e/corp/kaisha/group.html}} |
− | | | + | | headquarters2=2149 Paragon Drive, San Jose, California 95131, United States |
+ | | headquarters3=650 Townsend Street, Suite 575, San Francisco, California 94103-4908, United States{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20000511092523/http://www.segaarcade.com/htm_docs/info.htm}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{sub-stub}}'''Sega Enterprises, Inc. (USA)''', colloquially known as '''Sega Enterprises USA''' ('''SEU''') was an American subsidiary of [[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.]]. It was founded in 1985 to handle North American sales and distribution of Sega's arcade games. This is the second incarnation of a "Sega Enterprises, Inc."; [[Sega Enterprises, Inc.|the first attempt]] (also known as SEI) had its manufacturing facilities absorbed into [[Bally Manufacturing]] in 1984{{magref|cb|1984-06-09|28}}. Bally had first refusal rights for any Sega game sold in the US market, however this deal expired in March 1985, allowing Sega to re-enter on their own terms. | {{sub-stub}}'''Sega Enterprises, Inc. (USA)''', colloquially known as '''Sega Enterprises USA''' ('''SEU''') was an American subsidiary of [[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.]]. It was founded in 1985 to handle North American sales and distribution of Sega's arcade games. This is the second incarnation of a "Sega Enterprises, Inc."; [[Sega Enterprises, Inc.|the first attempt]] (also known as SEI) had its manufacturing facilities absorbed into [[Bally Manufacturing]] in 1984{{magref|cb|1984-06-09|28}}. Bally had first refusal rights for any Sega game sold in the US market, however this deal expired in March 1985, allowing Sega to re-enter on their own terms. |
Latest revision as of 17:22, 15 November 2024
Sega Enterprises USA | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Founded: 1985-03[1] | ||||||
Defunct: 2008-04 | ||||||
Merged into: Sega of America (2008) | ||||||
Headquarters:
|
This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
Sega Enterprises, Inc. (USA), colloquially known as Sega Enterprises USA (SEU) was an American subsidiary of Sega Enterprises, Ltd.. It was founded in 1985 to handle North American sales and distribution of Sega's arcade games. This is the second incarnation of a "Sega Enterprises, Inc."; the first attempt (also known as SEI) had its manufacturing facilities absorbed into Bally Manufacturing in 1984[4]. Bally had first refusal rights for any Sega game sold in the US market, however this deal expired in March 1985, allowing Sega to re-enter on their own terms.
SEU was one of two major Sega companies to operate in North Amerca, the other being Sega of America, established in 1986 to handle home consumer products (such as the Sega Master System). Both were subsidiaries of the Japanese operation and reported independently, though frequently worked together on projects as part of the wider Sega group. SEU is thought to have manufactured and assembled arcade games in the US, but the majority of video game research and development occured in Japan. It did, however, license some products developed by third parties, selling them under the Sega banner.
The first products SEU brought to market was the arcade adaption of Pitfall II: The Lost Caverns and the LaserDisc game GP World.
SEU briefly lost control over North American arcade sales after the formation of Sega GameWorks in March 1996, though would continue manufacturing and operations in Latin America. Control of North American sales would be transferred back in August 1998[5].
SEU and Sega of America's co-existence came to an end in 2008, when the two companies were merged.
Contents
Softography
Electro-mechanical arcade
- Bull's Eye (1988) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
Redemption game
- Quick Silver System (1992)
LaserDisc hardware
- Time Traveler (1991)
Hang-On hardware
- Hang-On (1985) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
X Board
- Thunder Blade (1987) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
System 24
- Super Masters (1989)
System 32
- Spider-Man: The Videogame (1991)
Model 2
- Rail Chase 2 (1995)
- Sega Rally Championship (1995) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
Model 3
- Star Wars Trilogy Arcade (1998)
- Magical Truck Adventure (1998)
Sega Titan Video
- Super Major League (1995) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
NAOMI
- Jambo! Safari (1999)
- Virtua NBA (2000)
- WWF Royal Rumble (2000)
- Capcom vs. SNK 2 Millionaire Fighting 2001 (2001) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
- WaveRunner GP (2001)
- Alien Front (2001)
NAOMI GD-ROM
- Capcom vs. SNK 2 Millionaire Fighting 2001 (2001) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
- Virtua Golf (2001)
- World Series Baseball (2001)
- The Maze of the Kings (2002)
NAOMI Multiboard
- Sega Strike Fighter (2000)
NAOMI Satellite Terminal
- Derby Owners Club World Edition (2001) (as Sega Enterprises, Inc.)
NAOMI 2
- Club Kart: European Session (2001)
- Wild Riders (2001)
- Soul Surfer (2002)
Hikaru
- Brave Firefighters (1999)
- NASCAR Arcade (2000)
- Air Trix (2001)
List of staff
References
- ↑ File:SegaCompanyProfile JP 1986.pdf, page 5
- ↑ http://www.sega.co.jp/sega_e/corp/kaisha/group.html (Wayback Machine: 1997-02-16 12:30)
- ↑ http://www.segaarcade.com/htm_docs/info.htm (Wayback Machine: 2000-05-11 09:25)
- ↑ Cash Box, "June 9, 1984" (US; 1984-06-09), page 28
- ↑ Next Generation, "November 1998" (US; 1998-10-20), page 18
Timeline of Sega amusement distribution in the United States |
---|
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
|