Sega are behind some of the greatest video games on the market today, and its history as a console manufacturer is now a ...
The great console wars of the early- to mid-90's was waged between two titans of the industry: Sega and Nintendo. In Nintendo ...
It always sounded a bit crunchy, but crunchy in a good way. SEGA’s 16-bit console, whether you call it the Genesis or Mega Drive, always had a unique sound thanks to it’s Yamaha YM2612 sound chip.
Sega AI computer, launched in 1986 ... As the company behind consoles like the Sega Genesis and beloved characters like Sonic the Hedgehog, Sega boasts a long and largely successful history.
68000 microprocessors appeared in the earliest Apple Macintoshes, the Commodore Amiga and Atari ST, and the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive ... one of its derivatives in a computer or game console.
Sega started stealing market share from Nintendo when they released the Sega Genesis. The Genesis hit the market a few years before the Super Nintendo. That gave Sega an edge because the Genesis was ...
Sega Genesis broke the hegemony that Nintendo had established in homes across the globe. The console wars began properly, with Sony getting in the mix with the PlayStation in time. First ...
But it went from selling over 30 million Sega Genesis consoles at the height of its fame in 1993 to selling just 3 million units of its final console before pulling the plug on its hardware empire.
Sega Dreamcast fans can finally put to rest their ongoing requests to see a new version of the console and its games come about.
How do we know? It's all thanks to a custom Sega Genesis cartridge. IGN received a Sonic the Hedgehog 3 film mailer this week that includes a Sega Genesis cartridge that's actually playable.