Difference between revisions of "Telephone card"

From Sega Retro

(→‎Gallery: well I was nearly right)
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SakuraTaisenDragon PhoneCard JP Front.jpg|''[[Sakura Taisen]]'' (''Dragon Magazine'')
 
SakuraTaisenDragon PhoneCard JP Front.jpg|''[[Sakura Taisen]]'' (''Dragon Magazine'')
 
SegataSanshiro PhoneCard JP Front.jpg|[[Segata Sanshiro]]
 
SegataSanshiro PhoneCard JP Front.jpg|[[Segata Sanshiro]]
YoukosoSegae PhoneCard JP Front.jpg|Youkoso Sega e
 
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  

Revision as of 13:07, 4 August 2019

This article is deprecated.
There's going to be too many to list one page - better to class them as merchandise for individual games/services/events.

In Japan, many public pay phones can be operated either with coins, or via a system known as telephone cards (テレホンカード). Customers would buy these pre-paid cards containing a specified amount of minutes. Over the years, many have been sponsored by Sega.

As with much of the world, public pay phones have been in steady decline due to the rise of low cost mobile and smart phones. The system still exists, but is not nearly as popular as it once was.

Gallery

  • Dreamacst magazine (many)
  • Dynamite Headdy
  • Fighters Megamix
  • Mega Drive 2
  • Sakura Taisen
  • Sakura Taisen 1 & 2
  • Sakura Taisen 3
  • Sakura Taisen Kinematron Hanagumi Mail
  • Satakore
  • Satakore NiGHTS
  • Sega Channel
  • Sega Rally (saturn)
  • Sega Touring Car (saturn)
  • Shining Force
  • Shining Force III Scenario 2
  • Sonic the Hedgehog
  • Sonic the Hedgehog (Amusement Space)
  • Teigeki Graph Sakura Taisen
  • Virtua Fighter (Saturn)
  • Virtua Fighter 2 (Saturn)
  • V-Saturn (woman in red)
  • V-Saturn (blue)
  • Wonder Library
  • Wondermega
  • Wondermega (heads)
  • Wondermega M2
  • Wondermega RG-M1