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I stopped playing my dream cast and took a glance at my shelf where I keep all my new consoles. There was my game cube and ps2 but there was no new and improved Sega console. Sega for me was the champion when it came to the console wars. But when they decided to stop making anymore consoles I was shocked.
Now days there are 3 main console giants the game cube, x box, ps2. All with excellent graphics and sounds and each one brings something new to the gaming table. But what if Sega had stayed in the game, who knows maybe right now we could have been playing a console ahead of its time.
Despite the fact they continue to make games I believe that since they are no longer in the console war they haven’t got that urge, passion, competitive spirit they had before which made them work harder and be more creative to come up with such classic games.
ty for your time
I stopped playing my dream cast and took a glance at my shelf where I keep all my new consoles. There was my game cube and ps2 but there was no new and improved Sega console. Sega for me was the champion when it came to the console wars. But when they decided to stop making anymore consoles I was shocked.
Now days there are 3 main console giants the game cube, x box, ps2. All with excellent graphics and sounds and each one brings something new to the gaming table. But what if Sega had stayed in the game, who knows maybe right now we could have been playing a console ahead of its time.
Despite the fact they continue to make games I believe that since they are no longer in the console war they haven’t got that urge, passion, competitive spirit they had before which made them work harder and be more creative to come up with such classic games.
ty for your time
Of course there were things such as Shenmue, but a lot of Sega's games seemed to fall short just as they were getting good (Phantasy Star online for instance was a great idea but ultimately became a glorified chatroom as there was little variation and there just wasn't enough to do).
Thankfully a bit of shallow multiplayer in the right genres (not RPG dammit!) is perfect for 8-16 players online and it's no wonder Sega have done so well with many of their online titles.
> Nope...SEGA went bankrupt so no, they weren't successfull.
night train wrote:
> True they did go bankrupt
Funny, I don't remember that...
They got into financial trouble anyway.
> Lipe wrote:
> Nope...SEGA went bankrupt so no, they weren't successfull.
>
> night train wrote:
> True they did go bankrupt
>
> Funny, I don't remember that...
Well they weren't making enough money to risk making another console. Is that better?
The things they did to advertise the damn console were ridiculous. Remember the 'SEGA' logo on the Arsenal shirt? Yup, they sponsered 50 million pounds for that, and it didn't help at all - people probably thought the Dreamcast was another brand of beer.
The launches? Well, the Australian launch was a disaster - there were plenty Dreamcasts, but there were no games and peripherials, so that was lame. Europe and Japan were delayed, the Online service didn't work properly - only US owners mangaed to get everything perfectly.
The adverts were also awful. Remember the one in the Barbers? Absolutely terrible - it didn't give any in game footage of anything, and SEGA just expected that everyone knew what a Dreamcast was. I certainly did. None of the mainstream lot did.
But at the the end of the day, we all played fantastic games. Soul Calibur, Skies Of Arcadia, Samba De Amigo, Shenmue, Jet Set Radio, Metropolis Street Racer - the list is endless. I've always wondered how SEGA would turn out if the Dreamcast was a Mega Drive-like success...
And by the way, Shenmue was very expensive, and made no profit, due to no one buying a Dreamcast.
Idiots.