The Sega Arcade Revolution: A History in 62 Games

The Sega Arcade Revolution: A History in 62 Games

by Ken Horowitz
The Sega Arcade Revolution: A History in 62 Games

The Sega Arcade Revolution: A History in 62 Games

by Ken Horowitz

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Overview

Long before it took the home video game console market by storm, Sega was already an arcade powerhouse. Parlaying its dominance in coin-operated machines into the home video game boom of the 1980s, the Japan-based company soon expanded with branches in Europe and the U.S., and continues to lead the gaming industry in design and quality.

Drawing on interviews with former developers and hundreds of documents, this history follows the rise of Sega, from its electromechanical machines of the mid-1960s to the acquisition of Gremlin Industries to its 2003 merger with Sammy Corporation. Sixty-two of Sega's most popular and groundbreaking games are explored.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781476631967
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 07/06/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 310
File size: 10 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Ken Horowitz is a professor of English and has written about Sega and video games for over a decade for his website, Sega-16, as well as for numerous other websites and magazines. He lives in Puerto Rico.
Ken Horowitz is a professor of English and has written about Sega and video games for over a decade for his website, Sega-16, as well as for numerous other websites and magazines. He lives in Puerto Rico.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Preface
The Arcade Origins of Sega
The Early Years (1945–1965) 3 • Sega Hits Arcade Gold (1966–1968) 6 • 
Periscope (March 1968) 8 • Missile (Circa April 1969) 11
Gone and Back Again
Pong-Tron (July 1973) 16
Planting the Seeds for the Future
There’s a Gremlin in the House
Head-On (April 1979) 24 • Monaco GP (November 1979) 27 • Carnival
(July 1980) 29 • Space Fury (July 1981) 31 • Frogger (U.S.—October 1981) 36
Sega’s Innovation Conquers U.S. Arcades (1981–1982)
Turbo (October 1981) 43 • Eliminator (December 1981) 46 • Zaxxon
(U.S.—March 1982) 48 • SUBROC-3D (U.S.—September 1982) 52 • Pengo
(September 1982) 54 • Buck Rogers: Planet of Zoom (December 1982) 56
Relaunched in Time for the Crash (1982–1983)
Star Trek: Strategic Operations Simulator (January 1983) 65 • Congo Bongo
(U.S.—March 1983) 69 • Astron Belt (October 1983) 71
Sega Enters a New Era (1984–1985)
Flicky (September 1984) 77 • Ninja Princess/Sega Ninja (March 1985) 81
Sega Enterprises USA (1985)
Choplifter (October 1985) 89 • Hang-On (U.S.—October 1985) 92
A Second Arcade Golden Age (1985–1988)
Space Harrier (December 1985) 100 • Fantasy Zone (March 1986) 102 • Quartet (April 1986) 106 • Wonder Boy (April 1986) 108 • OutRun (September 1986) 112 • Alien Syndrome (April 1987) 114 • SDI (April 1987) 116 • Super ­Hang-On
(U.S.—June 1987) 118 • After Burner (July 1987) 120 • Wonder Boy in Monster
Land (August 1987) 124 • Shinobi (November 1987) 126 • Thunder Blade
(December 1987) 131 • Galaxy Force/Galaxy Force II (April 1988) 132 • Altered Beast (June 1988) 134 • Power Drift (August 1988) 137
Sega Finishes the ’80s Strong
Gain Ground (November 1988) 141 • Super Monaco GP (May 1989) 144 • 
Golden Axe (May 1989) 148 • Mega-Tech Arcade System (1989) 151
Sega’s Famous AM Divisions Emerge
Sega R&D Dept. #1 (AM1) 154 • Sega R&D Dept. #2 (AM2) 155 • Sega R&D
Dept. #3 (AM3) 157 • Sega R&D Dept. #4 (AM4) 157 • Sega R&D Dept. #5 (AM5) 158 • Sega R&D Dept. #6 (AM6) 161 • Sega R&D Dept. #8 (Sonic Team) 161
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue
Columns (March 1990) 165 • Alien Storm (March 1990) 171 • Bonanza Bros.
(June 1990) 173 • Aurail (October 1990) 174 • Sega R360 (1990) 177 • Rad
Mobile (February 1991) 182 • Time Traveler (September 1991) 184 • Virtua Racing (August 1992) 187 • SegaSonic The Hedgehog (October 1993) 190 • Virtua Fighter (December 1993) 193
Sega Dominates the 3D Era (1993–1994)
Daytona USA (March 1994) 199 • Virtua Cop (September 1994) 204 • Virtua Fighter 2 (November 1994) 206
A Changing of the Guard and Continued Success (1995–1999)
Sega Rally Championship (February 1995) 212 • Virtua Cop 2 (September 1995) 215 • Fighting Vipers (November 1995) 217 • Virtual-On: Cyber Troopers (December 1996) 220 • Die Hard Arcade (July 1996) 222 • The House of the Dead (March 1996) 226 • Top Skater (May 1997) 229 • Daytona USA 2: Battle on the Edge (June 1998) 233 • Spikeout: Digital Battle Online (September 1998) 237 • Crazy
Taxi (February 1999) 240 • Planet Harriers (December 2000) 242
A New Sega for the New Millennium
Reborn and Refocused
New Leadership for Sega Amusements 250 • The Sega/Sammy Merger 253
Sega as an Arcade Center Operator
Sega Centers (1975–1983) 258 • P.J. Pizzazz (1980–Circa 1984) 261 • Sega’s
Time-Out Family Amusement Centers (1986–1990) 263 • Sega VirtuaLand
(1993) 269 • Joypolis (1994) 272 • SegaWorld London (1996–1999) 273 • Sega GameWorks (1997–2011) 276
An Undeniable Legacy
Works Cited
Index
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