Difference between revisions of "Dreamcast games"
From Sega Retro
Line 144: | Line 144: | ||
[[Category:Dreamcast games| ]] | [[Category:Dreamcast games| ]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Games]] |
Revision as of 11:19, 12 April 2022
This article needs cleanup. This article needs to be edited to conform to a higher standard of article quality. After the article has been cleaned up, you may remove this message. For help, see the How to Edit a Page article. |
As of November 2007, the Sega Dreamcast has 688 official games available in its library. There are also numerous homebrew games for the Dreamcast and games continue to be released by certain companies. Games were sold in jewel cases; jewel cases in Europe were twice as thick as their North American counterparts, possibly to have space for thick, multilingual instruction manuals.
Among the official games are Dreamcast online games that could be played over the Internet. The online servers were run by SegaNet, DreamArena, and GameSpy networks. Online game support was particularly popular in Japan, with releases of network compatible games such as Tech Romancer and Project Justice. Web browsers were developed by independent companies such as Planetweb to allow access to web sites and included features like Java, uploads, movies, and mouse support. Dreamarena came with games such as Sonic Adventure, and Chu Chu Rocket.
There are five games that can still be played online. Quake III Arena and Maximum Pool are still accessible via various servers. 4x4 Evolution and Starlancer are still online through Gamespy. SEGA Swirl can be also be played online with its play by e-mail game. Phantasy Star Online has private servers where people can use an action replay to bypass the online check and connect to the server.
Contents
Content
Official regulations
As with other consoles, Sega devised a set of software development guidelines to be adhered to when developing games for the system. In addition to ensuring that all games support (or at least don't break when using) the official line of controllers and care with copyrights and trademarks, several other "required compliance items" were enforced (in addition to recommended compliance items, and other less important items):
- and should always "accept" and "cancel" (unless able to be modified by the user)[1].
- It must be possible to start and operate a game from any of the four front controller ports (provided a compatible controller is connected)[2].
- Games must repeatedly check for controller inputs on the title screen, as it is valid to start the Dreamcast without any controllers connected[3].
- Stereo/monaural audio output settings must match the setting in the BIOS and not be saved to a memory card[4].
- The software reset must be implemented[5] and be performable on any controller port in use.
- If the lid is opened during play, the game must revert to the BIOS screen within ten seconds unless it is a multi-disc game[6]. Any saving must finish first[7].
- Logo screens must display for at least two seconds[8].
- Title screens must feature the text "PRESS START BUTTON" and should only advance when the START button is pressed (or if in a language other than English, a means of expressing the idea that START advances)[9].
- Any demo sequences should contain the text "PRESS START BUTTON" and/or "DEMO PLAY" to distinguish from normal gameplay[10]. Pressing START in this state should load the title screen[10].
- Menus should exist separately from the title screen[11].
- Important displays should not appear within 8 pixels horizontally and 16 pixels vertically from the screen edge in 320x240 mode, and 8 pixels horizontally and 32 pixels vertically from the screen edge in 640x480 mode[12]. This is to take into account poorly calibrated televisions and monitors.
- Avoid sudden switches from black to white (and vice versa) so as not to interefere with older television sync intervals[13].
- There are limitations on screen brightness in place both to assist viewing, screen burn-in and operation of the Dreamcast Gun[14].
- Pausing must occur through the START button[15] during gameplay. The word "PAUSE" must be displayed to distingush a pause from software bugs[16], and where applicable, show the initiator of the pause[16].
- A screen saver system is required should the game be paused for more than 300 seconds on a bright screen. This can be as simple as dimming the output[16].
- If loading from a disc takes more than ten seconds, a "Loading" screen should be displayed to help distingush between software bugs[17].
- Flashing images must adhere to the regulations outlined by the NHK and Japan Civil Broadcasting Union Guidelines[18].
Conversions
Being active from late 1998 to mid-2001, the Dreamcast was largely unchallenged in its role as a "next generation" console during its lifespan. Its design was such that it often made more sense to port over games from the PC than older consoles such as the PlayStation and Nintendo 64, and with many already optimised for PowerVR graphics cards, PC-to-Dreamcast conversions were often simpler than with generations prior.
Several third-party publishers were starting to pull out of Nintendo 64 development by 1999, so aside from the likes of Mortal Kombat Gold and San Francisco Rush 2049, very few games were converted from Nintendo's console. Likewise while many games were released concurrently on the PlayStation and Dreamcast, in most cases the Dreamcast conversion stemmed from PC code, meaning unlike the earlier Sega Saturn, there was less of a direct relationship between rival consoles.
Sharing hardware with Sega's then-cutting edge NAOMI arcade hardware led to many accurate arcade ports, beginning with titles such as Power Stone and Crazy Taxi and still seeing conversions as late as 2007 with Karous and Trigger Heart Exelica. Several older Model 3 titles such were also brought to the Dreamcast in updated forms; notably Sega Bass Fishing, Sega Rally 2 and Virtua Fighter 3tb.
Marketing
Pricing
Packaging
Japan
North America
Europe
Brazil
Unreleased games
- Main article: List of unreleased Dreamcast games.
There was much excitement over the Dreamcast when it launched, and with nearly a year passing between the Japanese and Western releases of the console, Dreamcast developers and publishers were able to get most projects planned for either 1999 or the first half of 2000 to retail. The console's abrupt end at the beginning of 2001 led to many projects being cancelled, both those always destined for a 2001 release, and those which had missed their late 2000 deadline, most notably the widely publicised port of Half-Life.
Sega themselves were forced to halt many Dreamcast projects, several of which would find a home on the Xbox in the years which followed. At this point in time it was becoming too costly to entirely abandon a game, so many third-party developers migrated Dreamcast projects to the PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube or if a version did not exist already, PC. Exceptions to this include games which were set to make heavy use of the internet, as it took many years for Sega's rivals to catch up in terms of online infrastructure.
Lists
Launch titles
Japan
North America
- Aerowings
- Air Force Delta
- Blue Stinger
- Expendable[19][20]
- Flag to Flag
- The House of the Dead 2
- Hydro Thunder
- Monaco Grand Prix
- Mortal Kombat Gold
- NFL 2K
- NFL Blitz 2000
- PenPen TriIcelon
- Power Stone
- Ready 2 Rumble Boxing
- Sonic Adventure
- SoulCalibur
- TNN Motorsports Hardcore Heat
- Tokyo Xtreme Racer
- TrickStyle
Europe
Brazil
- Blue Stinger
- Flag to Flag
- House of the Dead 2
- Hydro Thunder
- Mortal Kombat Gold
- Ready 2 Rumble Boxing
- Sonic Adventure
Software charts
- Dreamcast Japanese charts
- Dreamcast American charts
- Dreamcast British charts
- Dreamcast French charts
- Dreamcast German charts
- Dreamcast Spanish charts
References
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 5
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 9
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 10
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 15
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 17
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 20
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 21
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 27
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 32
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 33
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 35
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 41
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 42
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 43
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 47
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 48
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 77
- ↑ Sega Dreamcast Software Creation Standards, page 125
- ↑ Press release: 1999-08-09: Infogrames North America Prepares To Bring Non-Stop, Adrenaline-Pumping Action to the Dreamcast With Expendable
- ↑ Press release: 1999-09-08: Infogrames North America Gets Expendable With Sega Dreamcast; Intense Action Thriller To Release At Console Launch
- ↑ Press release: 1999-09-02: Sega Dreamcast Launch Titles and Peripherals
- ↑ Dreamcast Magazine, "No. 3" (UK; 1999-11-25), page 7
- ↑ Dreamcast (Tectoy) (Wayback Machine: 2000-03-03 16:07)