Difference between revisions of "History of Sega in Uruguay"

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From 1992, [[Tec Toy]] began working with [[Forstar]] to distribute the [[Sega Master System]]<ref>''Sega llego a Uruguay!'' - Action Games 14 page 75</ref>, [[Sega Mega Drive]]<ref>''Sega llego a Uruguay!'' - Action Games 14 page 75</ref> and [[Game Gear]] in Uruguay for a short period. The collaboration was very short lived and sometimes in 1994, [[Barraca Europa]] took over a distribution<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/19970724132553/http://www.tectoy.com.br:80/business/uruguay.htm</ref> and continued to distribute 8-bit and 16-bit systems, with new [[Game Gear]], [[Sega CD]] and later [[Sega 32X]] and [[Sega Saturn]].
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From 1992, [[Tec Toy]] began working with [[Forstar]] to distribute the [[Sega Master System]]<ref>''Sega llego a Uruguay!'' - Action Games 14 page 75</ref>, [[Sega Mega Drive]]<ref>''Sega llego a Uruguay!'' - Action Games 14 page 75</ref> and [[Game Gear]] in Uruguay for a short period. The collaboration was very short lived and sometimes in 1994, [[Barraca Europa]] took over a distribution<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/19970724132553/http://www.tectoy.com.br:80/business/uruguay.htm</ref> and continued to distribute 8-bit and 16-bit systems, with new [[Master System Super Compact]], [[Sega CD]] and later [[Sega 32X]] and [[Sega Saturn]].
  
 
While not as widespread of a problem as was the case in Argentina, video game piracy was rife in Uruguay, with unlicensed games being far more common than their official counterparts.
 
While not as widespread of a problem as was the case in Argentina, video game piracy was rife in Uruguay, with unlicensed games being far more common than their official counterparts.

Latest revision as of 08:32, 1 June 2024


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Uruguay 
History of Sega in Uruguay
Official Sega distributor(s): Forstar (1992-1994), Barraca Europa (1994-199x), NC Games (200x-2019), Latam Games (2012-present)

From 1992, Tec Toy began working with Forstar to distribute the Sega Master System[1], Sega Mega Drive[2] and Game Gear in Uruguay for a short period. The collaboration was very short lived and sometimes in 1994, Barraca Europa took over a distribution[3] and continued to distribute 8-bit and 16-bit systems, with new Master System Super Compact, Sega CD and later Sega 32X and Sega Saturn.

While not as widespread of a problem as was the case in Argentina, video game piracy was rife in Uruguay, with unlicensed games being far more common than their official counterparts.

From late 2000s, Sega games are distributed locally by two distributors - Latam Games and NC Games[4][5].

References

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