Difference between revisions of "Sega AM6"
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'''Sega Amusement Machine Research and Development Department #6''', commonly known as '''Sega AM R&D #6''' or '''Sega AM6''', was a research and development division within [[Sega]]. | '''Sega Amusement Machine Research and Development Department #6''', commonly known as '''Sega AM R&D #6''' or '''Sega AM6''', was a research and development division within [[Sega]]. | ||
− | The division was created in 1991 when it spun off from [[Sega AM4]].{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20030506055252/http://www.sega-mechatro.com/whats/history/his_side.html}} AM6 is a specialized group for development of [[:category:medal games]].{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} Unlike other Sega AM divisions, they have developed both cabinet and software.{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} The number of employees in 1996 was 52.{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} | + | The division was created in 1991 when it spun off from [[Sega AM4]].{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20030506055252/http://www.sega-mechatro.com/whats/history/his_side.html}} AM6 is a specialized group for development of [[:category:medal games|medal games]].{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} Unlike other Sega AM divisions, they have developed both cabinet and software.{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} The number of employees in 1996 was 52.{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} |
In 1999, AM6 merged with AM4 to become [[Sega Mechatronics]].{{fileref|DCM_JP_19991119_1999-36.pdf|page=15}} | In 1999, AM6 merged with AM4 to become [[Sega Mechatronics]].{{fileref|DCM_JP_19991119_1999-36.pdf|page=15}} |
Revision as of 07:29, 21 January 2020
Sega AM6 | ||
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Founded: 1991 | ||
Defunct: 1999 | ||
Merged into: Sega Mechatronics (1999) | ||
Headquarters:
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Sega Amusement Machine Research and Development Department #6, commonly known as Sega AM R&D #6 or Sega AM6, was a research and development division within Sega.
The division was created in 1991 when it spun off from Sega AM4.[1] AM6 is a specialized group for development of medal games.[2] Unlike other Sega AM divisions, they have developed both cabinet and software.[2] The number of employees in 1996 was 52.[2]
In 1999, AM6 merged with AM4 to become Sega Mechatronics.[3]
Contents
Members
Softography
H1 Board
- Aqua Stage (1995)
Medal game
- Western Dream (1992)
- Bingo Party (1993)
- Castle Coaster (1995)
- Royal Ascot II (1996)
- Roulette Club (1996)
- Bingo Party Phoenix (1996)
- Circle Fantasy (1996)
- Royal Ascot II Standard (1997)
- Yatterman (1997)
- Bingo Planet (1997)
- Yatterman Plus (1998)
Royal Ascot BD
- Royal Ascot (1992) (with Sega AM3, Sega AM4)
Western Dream BD
- Western Dream (1992) (with Sega AM4)
X Board
- Carribean Roule (1992) (with Sega AM4, Sega AM4)
Bingo Party BD/M1
- Bingo Party (1993) (with Sega AM4)
Castle Coaster BD
- Castle Coaster (1995) (with Sega AM4)
G-MAIN/M1
- Bingo Planet (1997) (with Sega AM4)
C-GAL/Sega Titan Video
- Fantasy Zone (ST-V game) (1997) (with Sega AM4)
Dedicated
- Golden Wave (1989)
- Bingo Carnival (1993) (with Sega AM4)
Magazine articles
- Main article: Sega AM6/Magazine articles.
References
- ↑ http://www.sega-mechatro.com/whats/history/his_side.html (Wayback Machine: 2003-05-06 05:52)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 File:SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf, page 145
- ↑ File:DCM_JP_19991119_1999-36.pdf, page 15
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