Difference between revisions of "Sega Park Madrid"

From Sega Retro

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<gallery>
 
<gallery>
 
San José de Valderas Shopping Center (Madrid).jpg|San José de Valderas Shopping Center in Alcorcón, Madrid
 
San José de Valderas Shopping Center (Madrid).jpg|San José de Valderas Shopping Center in Alcorcón, Madrid
SegaParkMadrid3.jpg|Sega Park Madrid Entrance (1995)
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SegaParkMadrid3.jpg|The entrance to Sega Park Madrid, in the San José de Valderas Shopping Center (1995)
 
SegaParkMadrid.jpg|the [https://segaretro.org/Dennou_Senki_Net_Merc "Sega Net Merc" system] in Sega Park Madrid (1995)
 
SegaParkMadrid.jpg|the [https://segaretro.org/Dennou_Senki_Net_Merc "Sega Net Merc" system] in Sega Park Madrid (1995)
 
SegaParkMadrid6.jpg|[https://segaretro.org/Dennou_Senki_Net_Merc "Sega Net Merc" system]
 
SegaParkMadrid6.jpg|[https://segaretro.org/Dennou_Senki_Net_Merc "Sega Net Merc" system]

Revision as of 18:19, 30 March 2018

Sega Park Madrid.jpg
Sega Park Madrid
Location: Paseo de Extremadura, Alcorcón, Madrid, Spain
Google maps: 40.3581774,-3.8172421
Opened: 1995-10-19[1]

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Sega Park Madrid was an indoor Sega Park arcade located in the San José de Valderas shopping center in Alcorcón, Madrid, opened in 19 October, 1995. It was the first[2] Sega Park inaugurated in Spain, born from a colaborative venture between Sega Amusements Spain S.L. and the Spanish department store group El Corte Inglés S.A.[3].

With an aproximated area of 900m², it had in is interior, 90 arcade gaming machines of various types at the time of their inauguration, distributed across three distinct areas, following a thematic distribution criteria, namely, a simulators zone, a kids zone, and a sports and fighting zone.

With such an array of arcade machines available at Sepa Park Madrid, the most outstanding among them were, the special arcade cabinet R360, the "Sega Net Merc" system and the Fighting Vipers arcade cabinet (the first Fighting Vipers arcade cabinet to reach Europe[4], and in fact, the first to leave Japan), which was provisionaly exhibited[4] in order to test their acceptance among the ocidental public.

Gallery

References


Sega Park venues in Spain
Madrid (1995-xxxx) | Cánovas Center (1995) | Marbella (1996-xxxx) | Burgos (1997-2008) | Sevilla (1997-199x) | San Fernando (199x-199x) | Jerez (199x-199x) | Murcia (199x-2008) | Cartagena (199x-199x) | Albacete (199x-199x) | Valladolid (199x-2009) | Córdoba (199x-199x) | Cullera (199x-2013) | Málaga (199x-199x)