Difference between revisions of "Megalopolis: Tokyo City Battle"

From Sega Retro

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{{stub}}'''''Megalopolis: Tokyo City Battle''''' is a CGI ridefilm for the [[AS-1]] motion simulator. It debuted in 1993 at SIGGRAPH's Electronic Theater, and is notable for being [[Tetsuya Mizuguchi]]'s first project for [[Sega]].
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{{sub-stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' is a CGI ridefilm for the [[AS-1]] motion simulator. It debuted in 1993 at SIGGRAPH's Electronic Theater, and is notable for being [[Tetsuya Mizuguchi]]'s first project for [[Sega]].
  
 
The film, set in the year 2154 AD, simulates a futuristic flying car-chase through Tokyo. Brute Bombalez, the leader of an urban eco-terrorist gang called the 'Red Dragons', has escaped the maximum security prison Megalopolis. As Tokyo police officers, the riders must fly through the neon cityscape and capture Bombalez before he can wreak his vengeance on innocent citizens.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19961224110234/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/as-1.html}}
 
The film, set in the year 2154 AD, simulates a futuristic flying car-chase through Tokyo. Brute Bombalez, the leader of an urban eco-terrorist gang called the 'Red Dragons', has escaped the maximum security prison Megalopolis. As Tokyo police officers, the riders must fly through the neon cityscape and capture Bombalez before he can wreak his vengeance on innocent citizens.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19961224110234/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/as-1.html}}
  
Footage from ''Megalopolis'' was re-used for the opening and ending sequences of the Japanese [[Sega Video Magazine]] series, as well as the 1994 CGI art film ''The Gate to the Mind's Eye'', where it received a new backing soundtrack by Thomas Dolby.  
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Footage from ''Megalopolis'' was re-used for the opening and ending sequences of the Japanese [[Sega Video Magazine]] series, as well as the 1994 CGI art film ''The Gate to the Mind's Eye'', where it received a new backing soundtrack by Thomas Dolby.
  
 
A port of ''Megalopolis'' was created for the [[Sega 32X]], but never released. Given the non-interactive nature of the film, it is likely that this version was intended to be technical demo showcasing the console's graphical capabilities.
 
A port of ''Megalopolis'' was created for the [[Sega 32X]], but never released. Given the non-interactive nature of the film, it is likely that this version was intended to be technical demo showcasing the console's graphical capabilities.
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==External link==
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==External links==
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-uVF66V95k "Armageddon", from ''The Gate to the Mind's Eye'', featuring ''Megalopolis'' (YouTube)]
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-uVF66V95k "Armageddon", from ''The Gate to the Mind's Eye'', featuring ''Megalopolis'' (YouTube)]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 10:42, 14 July 2018

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Megalopolis.png

Megalopolis: Tokyo City Battle
System(s): AS-1
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Genre: Simulation

















Number of players: 1-8
Release Date RRP Code

This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.


Megalopolis: Tokyo City Battle is a CGI ridefilm for the AS-1 motion simulator. It debuted in 1993 at SIGGRAPH's Electronic Theater, and is notable for being Tetsuya Mizuguchi's first project for Sega.

The film, set in the year 2154 AD, simulates a futuristic flying car-chase through Tokyo. Brute Bombalez, the leader of an urban eco-terrorist gang called the 'Red Dragons', has escaped the maximum security prison Megalopolis. As Tokyo police officers, the riders must fly through the neon cityscape and capture Bombalez before he can wreak his vengeance on innocent citizens.[1]

Footage from Megalopolis was re-used for the opening and ending sequences of the Japanese Sega Video Magazine series, as well as the 1994 CGI art film The Gate to the Mind's Eye, where it received a new backing soundtrack by Thomas Dolby.

A port of Megalopolis was created for the Sega 32X, but never released. Given the non-interactive nature of the film, it is likely that this version was intended to be technical demo showcasing the console's graphical capabilities.

Production credits

  • Director: Tetsuya Mizuguchi
  • Co-director; Animator: Michael Arias
  • Sound Designer: Mitchell Osias

External links

References

  1. http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/as-1.html (Wayback Machine: 1996-12-24 11:02)