Difference between revisions of "Nu"

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{{sub-stub}}The '''Nu''' is an arcade board created by [[Sega]]. It debuted with ''[[Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Arcade Future Tone]]'' in November 2013. Other than ''[[Luigi's Mansion Arcade]]'' by [[Capcom]], all games thus far are made for Japanese arcade operators.
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{{stub}}The '''Nu''' is an arcade board created by [[Sega]]. The board superseded the ''Ring'' family of systems with slightly more advanced PC-based hardware, though releases for both still appeared into the late 2010s. It debuted with ''[[Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Arcade Future Tone]]'', released in Japan, Asia, and in a limited exclusive capacity in across the US through [[wikipedia:Round1|Round1]] locations.  
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The original Nu hardware was only selected for one other game series in Japan, ''[[Wonderland Wars]]'', before being replaced by its modified successors [[Nu 1.1]], [[Nu 2]], and the lower-cost [[Nu SX]]. These collectively received slightly more releases both in Japan and internationally (the latter generally for overseas-friendly titles based on the ''Mario'' and ''Sonic'' properties).
  
 
==Technical specifications==
 
==Technical specifications==
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==Promotional material==
*''[[Wonderland Wars: Unmei No Jikokuban]]'' (2016)
 
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==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 20:24, 25 July 2024

Nu.jpg
Nu
Manufacturer: Sega
Release Date RRP Code
Arcade
JP
¥? ?






































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The Nu is an arcade board created by Sega. The board superseded the Ring family of systems with slightly more advanced PC-based hardware, though releases for both still appeared into the late 2010s. It debuted with Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Arcade Future Tone, released in Japan, Asia, and in a limited exclusive capacity in across the US through Round1 locations.

The original Nu hardware was only selected for one other game series in Japan, Wonderland Wars, before being replaced by its modified successors Nu 1.1, Nu 2, and the lower-cost Nu SX. These collectively received slightly more releases both in Japan and internationally (the latter generally for overseas-friendly titles based on the Mario and Sonic properties).

Technical specifications

  • CPU: Intel Core i3-3220 @ 3.30 GHz[1]
  • Main RAM: 4GB DDR3 SDRAM PC3‑12800 @ 800 MHz (12.8 GB/sec)
  • Storage: SATA
  • GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX650 Ti @ 980–1033 MHz
    • VRAM: 1GB GDDR5 @ 6.002 GHz (192‑bit, 144.2 GB/sec)
    • Features: Supports DirectX 11.1 and Open GL 4.3 with two screens in full HD
    • Core units: 768 unified shaders, 64 TMU, 24 ROP
    • Fillrate: 23.5 Gpixels/sec, 62.7 Gtexels/sec
    • Floating-point performance: 1.50528 GFLOPS
  • Sound: High definition audio (192kHz, 32bit, 5.1 channel output)
  • OS: Windows Embedded 8 Standard
  • I/O:
    • Video: Analog / Digital DVI-D x 1, Digital DVI-D x1
    • Sound: 5.1 channel with three stereo mini jacks
    • LAN: 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T
    • Arcade I/O: JVS I/O Controller Serial: 4x USB 3.0 ports, 2x CAN

List of games

Promotional material

References


Sega arcade boards
Originating in arcades









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