Difference between revisions of "Astro City"
From Sega Retro
Hyperspeed34 (talk | contribs) |
|||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
The ''Astro City'' is a refined version of the ''Aero City'', offering roughly the same features as its predecessor. This time a 29-inch screen is offered, while the cabinet as a whole weighs less and consumes less power. ''Astro City''s (and its close siblings, ''[[Astro City 2]]'' and ''[[New Astro City]]'') are among the more memorable universal cabinets - their design influenced the [[Sega Saturn]]'s [[Virtua Stick]] (model HSS-0136) and are still in widespread use today. | The ''Astro City'' is a refined version of the ''Aero City'', offering roughly the same features as its predecessor. This time a 29-inch screen is offered, while the cabinet as a whole weighs less and consumes less power. ''Astro City''s (and its close siblings, ''[[Astro City 2]]'' and ''[[New Astro City]]'') are among the more memorable universal cabinets - their design influenced the [[Sega Saturn]]'s [[Virtua Stick]] (model HSS-0136) and are still in widespread use today. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Sega Logistics Service]] announced it would end service on the cabinets on March 31, 2017.{{fileref|SegaProductsTerminationAnnouncement 2016-11 JP.pdf}} | ||
==Production credits== | ==Production credits== |
Revision as of 00:48, 13 May 2024
Astro City | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Developer: Sega | |||||||||
|
This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
Astro City (アストロシティ) is a multi-purpose arcade cabinet manufactured by Sega in 1993 as a successor to the Aero City cabinet.
The Astro City is a refined version of the Aero City, offering roughly the same features as its predecessor. This time a 29-inch screen is offered, while the cabinet as a whole weighs less and consumes less power. Astro Citys (and its close siblings, Astro City 2 and New Astro City) are among the more memorable universal cabinets - their design influenced the Sega Saturn's Virtua Stick (model HSS-0136) and are still in widespread use today.
Sega Logistics Service announced it would end service on the cabinets on March 31, 2017.[1]
Production credits
- Planning & Development: Masaki Matsuno[2]
Promotional material
Merchandise
- Main article: Astro City/Merchandise.
Physical scans
References
- ↑ File:SegaProductsTerminationAnnouncement 2016-11 JP.pdf
- ↑ https://www.4gamer.net/games/999/G999905/20200704005/ (Wayback Machine: 2020-07-24 15:01)
Multi-Purpose Arcade Cabinets Created by Sega |
---|
Upright/Sit-down |
City (1986) | Aero City (1988) | Swing (1991) | Astro City (1993) | Astro City 2 (1993) | New Astro City (1994) | Blast City (1996) | NAOMI Universal Cabinet (1999) | Net City (1999) | New Net City (xxxx) | Lindbergh Universal Cabinet (2007) |
Versus City (1996) | New Versus City (199x) |
Large |
Megalo 50 (1992) | Super Megalo (1993) | Euro Megalo (199x) | Super Megalo 2 (1994) | Megalo 410 (1996) | NAOMI DX Universal Cabinet (200x) |
Cocktail |
T-13 (1983) | Aero Table (1988) |