Here is another post that relates to the Dreamcast's 25th anniversary, as well the Tokyo Game Show that is currently in progress and ends on Sunday in Japan. It's the Official Sega Dreamcast Magazine's coverage of the Fall 1999 Tokyo Game Show from the January 2000 issue. I scanned this a while ago on a copying machine because the magazine is oversized and these scans are a bit on the small side, and I'd rather not try to redo them on my scanner. It wouldn't be too bad if not for the orange print on a red background on the second set of pages. That's a poor color combination that makes it difficult to read, though you can easily see the game titles in white.
Friday, September 27, 2024
Saturday, September 21, 2024
The Making of Sunsoft's Batman (Video Games & Computer Entertainment - March 1990)
Monday, September 9, 2024
Dreamcast 25th Anniversary
Five years ago I went all out on Dreamcast coverage for its 20th anniversary in the U.S. and now I don't have a lot leftover that I can post for its 25th anniversary. Of course, it originally launched in 1998 in Japan so today is, again, a U.S. launch anniversary as Sega's final game console debuted here on 9-9-99. I'm going to post a few random scans I didn't use in 2019 and I'll provide links to the 20th anniversary posts below as well.
From the June 2001 issue of Next Generation magazine is an article about the passing of Isao Okawa. He became president of Sega in 2000 and was the person who made the call to discontinue the Dreamcast, effectively turning Sega into a software-only company. Okawa-san actually wanted Sega to drop hardware before the Saturn launched and helped keep the company afloat using $500 million of his own money. The two other scans are interviews with Peter Moore (then Sega of America president) and Tetsuya Mizuguchi, producer of Space Channel 5 (plus Sega Rally Championship and later Rez).