Sega World Apollo
From Sega Retro
Sega World Apollo |
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Location: 大阪府大阪市阿倍野区阿倍野筋1-5-31 アポロビル3F, Japan |
Opened: 1972-07 |
Rebranded: 2022 (as GiGO) |
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Sega World Apollo (セガワールド アポロ), formerly Apollo Vegas (アポロベガス) and Hi-Tech Land Sega Amusement Theater (ハイテクランドセガアミューズメントシアター)[1] is thought to be Sega's longest running game center, originally opening in July 1972. It closed in 2022 after nearly 50 years in operation as a result of Genda GiGO acquiring all of SEGA's remaining arcade company shares. It was renamed under the GiGO brand.
Branding
Name | Branding | Date |
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Apollo Vegas (アポロベガス) | 1972-07 | |
Hi-Tech Land Sega Amusement Theater (ハイテクランドセガアミューズメントシアター) | Hi-Tech Land Sega | 19xx |
Sega World Apollo (セガワールド アポロ) | Sega World | 200x |
GiGO Abeno Apollo (GiGO あべのアポロ) | GiGO | 2022 |
Magazine articles
- Main article: Sega World Apollo/Magazine articles.
Gallery
References
- ↑ http://sega.jp/location/kansai/am_theater.html (Wayback Machine: 2001-12-20 22:08)
- ↑ http://sega.jp:80/location/kansai/am_theater.html (Wayback Machine: 2003-03-24 17:48)
- ↑ http://location.sega.jp/loc_web/sw_apollo.html (Wayback Machine: 2007-11-01 06:57)
- ↑ http://location.sega.jp/loc_web/sw_apollo.html (Wayback Machine: 2009-12-17 10:51)
Hi-Tech Land Sega venues in Japan |
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Akihabara | Akyuuzu | Amusement Theater | Avion | Bravo | Breeze | East 21 | El Nido | Fukushima | Hanoura | Harbor Place | Hirano Mise | Hirashima | Hita | Ikegami | Iwase | K.B. | Kamata Nishiguchi | Kanda | Kaori | Kasai Rinkai Kouen | Koriyama | Kotoni | Kurashiki | Marugame | Matsudo | Metarium | Minami Sports Plaza | Misto II | Nishinakajima | Orchestra | Paradune | Rock | Shibuya | Shikou | Shin Yokohama BC | Shintoku | Shinzaike | Tateishi | Totsuka | Toyo Bowl | Toyohashi | Train |