History of Sega in Poland
From Sega Retro
This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.
History of Sega in Poland |
---|
Official Sega distributor(s): Bobmark International (1994-1998), Lanser (2000-2003), CD Projekt (2003-2014), Cenega (2014-) |
The fall of communist Poland in the September of 1989 led to the peaceful transition to the Third Polish Republic in the years that followed. No longer under strict political regimes and the wider sphere of influence from the Soviet Union, Poland was able to open its markets in the early 1990s, enabling the country to import luxary items (such as video game consoles) from elsewhere.Until 1994, Sega consoles reached the state only as a gift for children from people working abroad.
Bobmark
Like many of its contemporaries, Sega did not immediately create distribution channels across the Eastern bloc, so in order to supply video games to the country, local companies were forced to innovate. Bobmark International was among the first companies to enter the Polish market, and in 1992 began distributing Pegasus consoles in the region - a clone of the Nintendo Famicom which also found success across the former Yugoslavian republics around this time.
The Pegasus line would become the dominant console across Poland, however 1994 saw a change in the law preventing Bobmark from selling another unlicensed system. In response, the company acquired an official distribution license from Sega, and in 1994 began marketing Sega products in the country. Bobmark created a new company, trading as AGES ("Sega" reversed) specifically to distribute these systems.
Alongside the model 2 Sega Mega Drive, Ages would attempt to market the model 2 Sega Mega-CD, model 2 Sega Master System and Sega Game Gear in the region. The Polish public were not receptive - no Sega console sold as well as the company had hoped, unlike its Pegasus systems which were far more popular. Bobmark would abandon the Ages moniker and begin trading as itself once more in summer 1995 .
In response (and possibly with the blessing of Sega), Bobmark began selling the unlicensed Taiwanese-built KW-501 Mega Drive clone as the Power Pegasus. Released in preparation for Christmas 1995 and hoping to trade off a more successful brand, it too failed to catch on.
On March 1, 1996 Bobmark released the Sega Saturn, however despite its large advertising campaign, the system fell short of expectations. In 1998 the company cancelled its distribution agreement[1].
also published in:
- Secret Service (PL) #38: "Wrzesień 1996" (1996-09-01)[2]
Lanser , CD Projekt and Cenega
Lanser distributed the Sega Dreamcast between 2000 and 2003.In 2003, CDP became the exclusive distributor of Sega products. The cooperation lasted until 2014 in which the functions of the distributor were taken over byCenega. This was due to problems in the CDP company. Cenega is still the official representative of Sega in Poland and throughout the Visegrad Group.
Sega Mega Drive clones
Many stores started to sell bootleg games knowing that many people have Sega Mega Drive consoles imported from abroad .Games cost less than 50 PLN ($ 15).Before Sega entered Poland, Hegatar Computing started selling the Super Drive console in 1994.The console, however, was not popular and was quickly forgotten.There were many other clones but they were not very popular. Their price was about 300 PLN ($ 80).
Gallery
References