Difference between revisions of "Sega CS3"

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==List of staff==
 
==List of staff==
 
{{StaffList|Sega CS3}}
 
{{StaffList|Sega CS3}}
 
==Magazine articles==
 
{{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Magazine articles}}
 
  
 
==Photo gallery==
 
==Photo gallery==

Revision as of 15:10, 24 September 2023

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Sega CS3
Division of Sega of Japan
Founded: 1991
Defunct: 1995
Headquarters:
Japan
1991
1995

Sega Consumer Research and Development Dept. #3 (nickamed Sega CS3, which it was officially renamed to in 1994)[1] was a video game research and development division within Sega. As the name suggests, it was the third "consumer"-specific R&D department created by Sega of Japan. It was managed by Makoto Oshitani until 1994,[2][1] developing Mega Drive games and seemingly every first-party game for Mega-CD during its latter years.

It had 3 programming sections in 1992, managed in order by Toshinori Asai, Takashi Shoji and Shuichi Katagi. It also had at least 2 design sections, the second of which was managed by Koichi Nagata, and only 1 known art section, managed by Masayuki Hasegawa.[3] Come 1993, its section managers were Keiichi Yamamoto (programming), Tomohiro Kondo (design) and Hiroyuki Kawaguchi (art)[3], known in 1993 to have had major input on the Mega-CD games Panic! (developed throughout 1992)[4] and/or Sonic the Hedgehog CD (developed throughout 1992 and 1993).[5]

Some evidence suggests CS3 housed the consumer sound department in 1993, with Tokuhiko Uwabo[6] and Masayuki Nagao[7] known to have been part of CS3 Sound.

In 1994 its producer became Hiroshi Aso[1], now being assigned to develop content for Mega Drive and 32X.[8][9] Another head developer in the department was art director Yukio Sato.[1] Several of the 32X games Aso produced feature individual developers who also worked on games by Sega CS4, another department focused on Mega Drive and 32X.[8][9]

It was abolished in 1995 alongside every other separate consumer department and merged into a temporary single department, with a new Sega CS3 established in 1996.[10]

Softography

List of staff

Photo gallery

References


Timeline of Sega of Japan research and development divisions








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