Difference between revisions of "History of Sega in Bosnia and Herzegovina"

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Socialist Yugoslavia did not belong to the Warsaw Pact. A small amount of Sega, Nintendo and Atari games and consoles were sold here.Since 1988, a company from London called [[ActiveMagic]] began selling [[Sega]] games.Somewhere in the late 80's and early 90's, [[Sega Master System]] began to appear in Yugoslavia, however, it was not very popular<ref>http://retrospec.sgn.net/users/tomcat/yu/magshow.php?auto=&page=6&all=SI_90_01</ref>. In 1991, after the declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia, the [[Sega Mega Drive]] was released.Bosnia  declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1992, but the war quickly began. The terrible war caused that foreign companies such as [[Sega]] could not find their representatives. Sega and Nintendo consoles appeared during the war as a donation from other countries. During the war they gained popularity of the Famiclons, including Terminator 2 - modeled on the Sega Mega Drive I and the Pegasus console. The war ended in 1995 with the Dayton Agreement. The country was 80% destroyed and the population could not afford to new consoles. The popularity began to enjoy bootlegs. Bootlegs for the Mega Drive games appeared and some sources also talk about the [[Power Pegasus]] console in 1996 . The pirate games on PS1 have become more and more popular. Information about Sega from this period is very small.In 2004 Sega started cooperation with [[Videotop]]. In 2010, [[Computerland]] represented Sega in this region. [[Videotop]] return in 2016 as a distributor in the former Yugoslavia.<ref> http://www.videotop.si/en/videotop-je-postal-uradni-zastopnik-zaloznika-sega/</ref>
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==Socialist Yugoslavia==
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Socialist Yugoslavia did not belong to the Warsaw Pact. A small amount of Sega, Nintendo and Atari games and consoles were sold here.Since 1988, a company from London called [[ActiveMagic]] began selling [[Sega]] computer games.Although Active Magic was a Mastertronic distributor (Who sold Sega consoles in Western Europe), it is not known whether it was distributing Sega consoles.Somewhere between 1989/1990, [[Sega Master System]] began to appear in Yugoslavia, however, it was not very popular<ref>http://retrospec.sgn.net/users/tomcat/yu/magshow.php?auto=&page=6&all=SI_90_01</ref>.In 1991, after the declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia, the [[Sega Mega Drive]] was released.
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== Bosnia and Herzegovina ==
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In 1991, after the declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia, the [[Sega Mega Drive]] was released.Bosnia  declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1992, but the war quickly began. The terrible war caused that foreign companies such as [[Sega]] could not find their representatives. Sega and Nintendo consoles appeared during the war as a donation from other countries. During the war they gained popularity of the Famiclons, including Terminator 2 - modeled on the Sega Mega Drive I and the Pegasus console. The war ended in 1995 with the Dayton Agreement. The country was 80% destroyed and the population could not afford to new consoles. The popularity began to enjoy bootlegs. Bootlegs for the Mega Drive games appeared and some sources also talk about the [[Power Pegasus]] console in 1996 . The pirate games on PS1 have become more and more popular. Information about Sega from this period is very small.In 2004 Sega started cooperation with [[Videotop]]. In 2010, [[Computerland]] represented Sega in this region. [[Videotop]] return in 2016 as a distributor in the former Yugoslavia.<ref> http://www.videotop.si/en/videotop-je-postal-uradni-zastopnik-zaloznika-sega/</ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 11:41, 25 November 2018

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Bosnia and Herzegovina 
History of Sega in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Official Sega distributor(s): ActiveMagic (1988-1992) , Videotop (2004-2010) , Computerland (2010-2015), Videotop (2016-present),

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Socialist Yugoslavia

Socialist Yugoslavia did not belong to the Warsaw Pact. A small amount of Sega, Nintendo and Atari games and consoles were sold here.Since 1988, a company from London called ActiveMagic began selling Sega computer games.Although Active Magic was a Mastertronic distributor (Who sold Sega consoles in Western Europe), it is not known whether it was distributing Sega consoles.Somewhere between 1989/1990, Sega Master System began to appear in Yugoslavia, however, it was not very popular[1].In 1991, after the declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia, the Sega Mega Drive was released.

Bosnia and Herzegovina

In 1991, after the declaration of independence by Slovenia and Croatia, the Sega Mega Drive was released.Bosnia declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1992, but the war quickly began. The terrible war caused that foreign companies such as Sega could not find their representatives. Sega and Nintendo consoles appeared during the war as a donation from other countries. During the war they gained popularity of the Famiclons, including Terminator 2 - modeled on the Sega Mega Drive I and the Pegasus console. The war ended in 1995 with the Dayton Agreement. The country was 80% destroyed and the population could not afford to new consoles. The popularity began to enjoy bootlegs. Bootlegs for the Mega Drive games appeared and some sources also talk about the Power Pegasus console in 1996 . The pirate games on PS1 have become more and more popular. Information about Sega from this period is very small.In 2004 Sega started cooperation with Videotop. In 2010, Computerland represented Sega in this region. Videotop return in 2016 as a distributor in the former Yugoslavia.[2]

References

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