Sega development studios - Biblioteka.sk

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Sega development studios
 ...
Sega
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryVideo games
Key people
ParentSega Sammy
Websitewww.sega.com
www.sega.jp

This is a list of development studios owned by Sega, a Japanese video game developer and publisher based in Tokyo, Japan. Accompanied with the list is their history of game development. Also included are the companies that Sega has acquired over the years. For a full list of games developed and published by Sega, see List of Sega video games, List of Sega mobile games and List of Sega arcade games.

1960–1990

During the early 1960s, Sega had around 40 developers. One of the developers was Hisashi Suzuki who previously was in charge of autodesign at Tokyu Kogyu Kurogane, he changed jobs to Sega in 1964, which then was called Nihon Goraku Bussan. As the company grew, Suzuki recalls about eight departments dedicated to development, which were arcades, arcade cabinets and consumer products. Sega rarely outsourced their games, much like Namco and Taito, as it was hard to find other companies that could do design, manufacturing, marketing and maintenance all at once.[1]

A new building for development was established in 1985.[2]

Another early developer was Hideki Sato, who joined 1971. He recalls, when he joined Sega, they were making pinball tables, electro-mechanical games, however mainly sold jukeboxes. Hideki Sato was part of a development team that mainly had around 20 people, and they were engaged in pinball tables and electro-mechanical games. Sato was assigned to the team that made pinball tables, which were imported from America, but had modifications done to them so they would be more fun.

The UFO Catcher became synonymous with the claw crane game in Japan

Sega at that time was owned by a foreign company and led by David Rosen. He brought Pong from Atari to the Japanese offices, which impressed Sato. The developers quickly researched how games with TV's were made, and thus Sega quickly brought its first video game to market with Pong Tron in 1973. Hayao Nakayama, who later became president, joined Sega after the purchase of game distribution company Esco Trading. According to Sato, Nakayama was more than just a manager, he had helpful input into games like Monaco GP as well, as he firmly understood the business of games and that the development division is the most important part of a company.[3] Sega learned a lot about programming and software after purchasing Gremlin Industries in 1978, which was located in San Diego. It was because of this purchase that Sega began using printed circuit boards for games. Sega's first arcade board was the System 1, which debuted with Star Jacker. It was developed by Sato and was their first standardized arcade board, before then each game had individually costumized hardware.[4] Home computers was an interest of Nakayama, the MSX was becoming popular.[4] So a small team of three people were involved in creating the SC-3000. The game capabilities of it were turned into the SG-1000, the first home console of Sega, which was made after Sega learned about Nintendo's plans to release the Famicom. At the same time the System 2 arcade hardware was developed, this time by an engineer called Hiroshi Yagi. The new console Sega Mark III, overseas called Sega Master System, was made with the purpose that System 1 and 2 arcade games could easily be ported. It was thought that spreading home hardware while also developing more powerful arcade hardware would make players go to an actual arcade, and that this would create a virtous cycle.[4] System 2 was also capable of displaying multiple screens which was used in a horse racing medal game called Super Derby. This was useful for the development of the Sega Game Gear, which released in 1990.[5] Since 1985, the Motorola 68000 was used in arcades, and it was modified to suit home consoles, which resulted in the Mega Drive in 1988. According to Sato this was when Sega began sharing the know-how between arcade and home hardware.[3] Sega also increased the amount of female customers in arcades with the UFO Catcher, an improved type of crane game that existed before, and acquiring the Tetris license for arcades.[6]

OutRun sit down cabinet

In terms of software developers, Yoji Ishii joined 1978, and was involved in sound engineering on various titles like Monaco GP and Zaxxon, before being involved in the planning section working on early arcade titles like Up'n Down, Sindbad Mystery, Flicky, Teddy Boy Blues and Fantasy Zone. He also worked with Yu Suzuki on his titles later on, and then moved on to management duties.[7][8] Yu Suzuki joined in 1983, and after a year of doing chores and developing Champion Boxing, he was developing big sensory cabinet games like Hang-On, Space Harrier, OutRun and After Burner. Each took about six months.[9] According to Hisashi Suzuki, it was the environment of being able to do everything in-house that made these kind of cabinets possible.[1] Yuji Naka joined the company alongside Hiroshi Kawaguchi and was part of the team that developed software for the SC-3000, the PC Division, which according to Naka had about fifteen developers. Only some games were outsourced to Compile, all the software was done in-house. Software developers were only around 50 people at most, 20 or 30 for hardware-related matters. The pace of software development was to develop one game every one to two months, Yuji Naka recalls bragging with Yu Suzuki who worked more overtime, and it was usual to work at weekends too, as they were essentially living at the company.[10] Mark Cerny, the only foreigner in development, recalls the company was very much a sweatshop, saying "It's one programmer, one artist, three months. That's a game. The tokyo group made about 40 games, from which about only two could be played and enjoyed".[11] Yuji Naka already had a reputation as a great programmer early on.[12] Naka had a desire to make games that were not possible on Nintendo hardware, or to port arcade games from more powerful hardware. Examples of this include the 3D Dungeons of Phantasy Star, the Mark III version of Hokuto no Ken (overseas known as Black Belt) or ports of the arcade games Space Harrier, Super Thunder Blade and the Capcom game Ghouls 'n Ghosts. However it was the development plan "a game to beat Mario" that caught the attention of a superior of Naka, which started the development of Sonic the Hedgehog.[10] The Genesis generally marked a turning point were more original software for consoles began development such as Alex Kidd in the Enchanted Castle, The Revenge of Shinobi, Phantasy Star II and Sword of Vermillion.[13]

Early development

Department Headed By Notable Titles/Products Ref(s)
Production & Engineering David Rosen [14]
PC Division Unknown

1983–1990

Department Division Headed By Notable Titles/Products Ref(s)
DD (Development Division) 1 R&D,

Sega Enterprises

Hisashi Suzuki, Yoji Ishii [15][16][17][18][19]
DD2 Mamoru Shigeta, Minoru Kanari [20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]

[28]

DD3 Hideki Sato
DD4 Unknown
DD5
DD6 Unknown
DD7 Unknown
Studio 128 Yu Suzuki [29]
DD9 Unknown [30][31]

1991–1999

Yu Suzuki and Mark Cerny have both previously worked at Sega

Yu Suzuki was the first to branch out, with his own studio called Studio 128. After that, many more departments followed, all of which had their roots in R&D1. Hisao Oguchi recalls up to six departments; according to him the environment was extremely competitive. Hisashi Suzuki often asked "what's new?" and had a desire of the development teams to be "first in the world" when looking at their game pitches. Nakayama had harsh opinions on the developers that didn't make money in the arcades, and thus supported developers like Yu Suzuki, who created many hits.[32] Nakayama gave an order to develop a title better than Street Fighter II by Capcom. Namco was also ahead in the arcade industry with Winning Run. To catch up, Yu Suzuki purchased SGI IRIS workstations from Silicon Valley to develop Virtua Racing, which lead to Virtua Fighter, which satisfied Nakayama's expectations. In collaboration with GE, the Sega Model 2 and Sega Model 3 arcade hardware was made possible, and produced further games with very advanced graphics and also multiplayer titles were made possible with Virtua Striker and SpikeOut. At the time, Sega was involved with Vivendi and Universal on Gameworks arcades, and thus had a connection to Steven Spielberg, who visited the Sega offices and saw the prototype of Shenmue, which was something that he was very impressed with. This caused Sega management to further support it. However, according to Hisashi Suzuki this meant Yu Suzuki leaving the arcade business to develop console projects, and no one was able to tame Yu Suzuki, which meants that the project went out of control.[33] Shenmue, which was previously Virtua Fighter RPG,[34] started development on the Sega Saturn. AM2 developed a development environment for the Sega Saturn, called the Sega Graphic Library, due to the Sega Saturn being difficult to make games for.[35]

8 player Virtua Racing set-up

On the opposite trend, Hisao Oguchi of AM3 was aiming to make games for couples and as another theme to release game that were "cool" rather than otaku like. AM3 developer Mie Kumagai who later garnered attention later on as a female manager of a development department shared this sentiment as "the future of arcades cannot be boys only". Rail Chase, Jurassic Park, Jambo! Safari, Top Skater and a variety of sports games such as Virtua Tennis, were part of this direction. However, most of the income at arcades in Japan came from core players rather than casuals.[32][36][37] AM5 was established which at first made kiddie rides with monitors, which were successful but went on to make large scale attractions, one of which was the VR-1, an early example of Virtual Reality.[38]

Masao Yoshimoto, who joined in 1987, and developed the R-360 among many other arcade cabinets, recalled this period as the golden age of Sega, when both advanced graphics and big motion sensitive cabinets such as the ones for Manx TT Superbike and WaveRunner were made possible.[39]

Putting to use what Naka learned by porting Ghouls 'n Ghosts to the Genesis, he went on to develop Sonic the Hedgehog, along with artist Naoto Oshima and designer Hirokazu Yasuhara. Sonic had a much bigger development period than other Sega games at the time, with Mark Cerny recalling it having ten months development time, and three core developers instead of two.[40][11] Yuji Naka himself worked on it for one year and a half, and did not work on any other games in the meantime, in contrast to the frequent releases he had before.[10] Sega of America marketing strategies made Sonic the Hedgehog a success for Sega, causing them to have 61% market share in North America with their Genesis consoles. Yuji Naka quit Sega due to him feeling that he did not get enough appreciation for his work on Sonic, but then was invited by Mark Cerny to join his development group, the Sega Technical Institute, and he along with ten other developers went to Sega of America and developed the sequels Sonic 2, Sonic 3 and Sonic & Knuckles. In addition to STI, Sega Interactive, Sega Midwest Studio and Sega Multimedia Studio were other studios that Sega of America established at this time.[41][42][43] Japanese game development also expanded externally with SIMS, which was previously Sanritsu, and Sonic Software Planning! which often worked with Climax Entertainment.[12] Other worldwide successes developed by the Japanese group were Streets of Rage II and Phantasy Star IV which were appreciated in all parts of the world.[12]

The new headquarters was completed in 1994.[2]

The Sega CD was developed to get ahead in Japan, as the PC Engine was more popular and also had a CD drive. According to hardware developer Masami Ishikawa, Sega was able to increase performance and storage, and thus was able to release a nice RPG on it.[44] The most famous title for the Sega CD, was Sonic CD, which was developed in Japan without the involvement of Yuji Naka, although ideas were exchanged. It was mainly developed by Naoto Oshima along with much staff that was gathered from all over Sega, many of them young.[45] RPG's were the most popular in Japan, and the RPG's from Game Arts were an important asset for Sega, but those games as well as Sega's own Shining and Phantasy Star series were unable to compete with Dragon Quest, Final Fantasy and Ys I&II.[13] This is why Sega thought of using the Virtua Fighter IP to create an RPG, since it was Sega's most popular IP in Japan, however it eventually evolved to become Shenmue.[34]

Being behind in Japan, motivated Sega to put a lot of resources into the Sega Saturn. The development team of the Saturn was the same that developed by System 32 arcade board.[4] Sato regrets that he did not go with the Model 1 arcade hardware as a base, as he was too concerned of leaving all the developers behind that were focused on sprites rather than 3D, which were the majority of developers.[46] Sega supported five different console hardware, with the first and second department focusing on Sega Saturn, the third and fourth on the Genesis as well as add-ons 32X and Sega CD, a fifth development department existed for Game Gear development and a sixth department existed for RPG's. Also a department of about 40 people dedicated to porting games to PC was established, as Windows 95 became widespread in Japan.[47] Including overseas staff and arcade developers, over a 1000 developers were engaged in development.

Japanese copies of Sega Saturn games

Sega Saturn projects were much larger in comparison to other teams at the time, scaling up from the five or ten people involved in Master System or Genesis games. An early large project was Panzer Dragoon as about 30 people were involved. Yoji Ishii was transferred from the arcade to console development in 1993,[7] and many others from the arcades followed, making it up to several hundred developers involved in Sega Saturn development.[48] Early on, the 3D capabilities were not shown off well with a lacking port of Daytona USA as well Clockwork Knights, which was mainly 2D. By 1995, the Saturn could compete very well with PlayStation in Japan with ports of Virtua Fighter 2, Virtua Cop and Sega Rally Championship. Particularly Virtua Fighter 2 became the first million-seller for Sega in Japan. RPG's like Sakura Wars, Magic Knight Rayearth and Dragon Force, anime license games such as Neon Genesis Evangelion and sports games also did very well in Japan.[13] Yuji Naka also gone back to Japan and wanted to develop 3D games after being sent videotapes of the games that Yu Suzuki was developing. Naka had no desire to develop for the Sega 32X, which was mainly spearheaded by Sega of America.[10] Game producer Takayuki Kawagoe called the line-up for the 32X quite weak, as games like Knuckles Chaotix were previously just 16-bit titles, but praised the original titles such as Metal Head.[49] Yuji Naka, along with Naoto Oshima developed NiGHTS Into Dreams and Burning Rangers, with the latter not having much involvement from Naka.[45] Much like how Sonic was made to succeed in America, NiGHTS was made to succeed in Europe, although that was the desire by the development team, rather than marketing.[40] According to manager Hisashi Suzuki, the turning point was the release of Final Fantasy VII. It and the influence of Dragon Quest was far too great for Sega to overcome. It did not only influence the fortune of Sega in console development, but also the relevancy of arcades was put into question as well.[1] To combat Final Fantasy VII, Team Andromeda, the team behind Panzer Dragoon was instructed to develop an RPG, which was Panzer Dragoon Saga.[50]

Sega Genesis with all add-ons attached

Isao Okawa, the chairman of CSK, which was the parent company of Sega, said "let's try one more time",[34] in regard to Sega hardware. Sonic Adventure, Virtua Fighter 3, an early version of Skies of Arcadia[51] and Shenmue moved from Saturn to the new Dreamcast and in-house development for Sega Saturn completely halted in 1998. The NAOMI arcade hardware was developed to make porting titles to the Dreamcast without loss of quality. Therefore, home and arcade hardware became equal.[13] Isao Okawa personally instructed Yuji Naka, to create an online game for the new Dreamcast. Naka released Chu Chu Rocket as a test for the online capabilities for the Dreamcast. The turnover of staff was the largest at Sega since 1986, as staff began to establish new companies such as Artoon.[48][52] Visual Concepts was acquired by Sega of America to develop sports titles, while No Cliche was established by Sega Europe.[53][54]

1991–1995

Department Division Members From Headed By Notable Titles/Products Ref(s)
AM1 Amusement

R&D,

Sega Enterprises

Sega R&D1 Rikiya Nakagawa [55][56][57]
AM2 Studio 128 Yu Suzuki [58][56][59]
AM3 Sega R&D1 Hisao Oguchi [60][56]
AM4 Sega R&D4, R&D5 Masao Yoshimoto
AM5 Tokinori Kaneyasu
AM6 Tomoji Miyamoto
CS1

(includes Team Andromeda)

Consumer

R&D,

Sega Enterprises

Sega R&D2, Sega R&D6 Makoto Oshitani, Yoji Ishii [61]
CS2 Hiroshi Aso, Makoto Oshitani
CS3
CS4 Koichi Nagata
CS5 Motoshige Hokoyama
RPG Production Tomio Takami

1996–1999

Department Division Members From Headed By Notable Titles/Products Ref(s)
AM1 Amusement

R&D,

Sega Enterprises

Same Rikiya Nakagawa
[55]
AM2 Yu Suzuki
AM3 Hisao Oguchi [60]
AM4 Masao Yoshimoto
AM5 Tokinori Kaneyasu
  • Boat Race GP
  • Halfpipe Canyon
  • Sega Rally Special Stage
AM6 Tomoji Miyamoto
  • Medal games
AM11 Sega AM2 Toshihiro Nagoshi
AM Annex/ AM12 Sega AM3 Tetsuya Mizuguchi
CS1/AM6

(includes Team Andromeda)

Consumer

R&D,

Sega Enterprises

Sega CS1

+ Sega CS2

+ Sega CS3

+ Sega CS4

+ Sega CS5

+ RPG Production

Noriyoshi Oba
[62][56]
CS2/AM7 Noriyoshi Oba
[62][56]
CS3/AM8

(includes Sonic Team)

Yuji Naka [62][56]
CS4/AM9 Tetsuya Mizuguchi
Sega PC New Hiroyuki Okata
Sega Digital Studio/AM10 New Yukifimi Makino
  • Music for Sega games
AM1 (US Team) Sega of America Sega AM1 Roger Hector, Makoto Uchida [63]

2000–2004

Jet Set Radio on the Dreamcast was one of the innovative titles earning praise at the time

Sega officially announced their withdrawal from the console hardware market on January 31, 2001, to develop games for other hardware.[3] In addition, the development team was split off into separate companies in April 21 of 2000, which were about ten different ones. Each headed by their own president, with their own philosophies and they were responsible for their own finances. All the different companies also supported different consoles after ending support for the Dreamcast, with the Xbox being supported by WOW Entertainment, Hitmaker and Smilebit, the Gamecube being supported by Sonic Team and Amusement Vision and the PlayStation 2 being supported by Overworks, AM2, United Game Artists and Smilebit.[64] Tetsuya Mizuguchi, head of United Game Artist, saw this initially as a move of Sega of being more similar to Hollywood, where distribution and development were becoming more and more separated.[65] Toshihiro Nagoshi recalls this period as labour of love from Sega, "teaching the creatives the way of managing a business".[66] Hisao Oguchi who lead the Hitmaker studio had a suspicion that this structure was made to separate the creators who were able to make profit and the ones who didn't, as they were many projects that didn't hit the mark, and at one point Sega was hiring hundreds of developers a year, effecting costs that were no longer manageable.[32] However journalists praised the innovation of Sega's titles during this period as a "brief moment of remarkable creativity''.[67]

Arcade machines that dispense cards ended up being very successful for Sega

In the end, Yuji Naka, who lead Sonic Team, was considered to be the most successful in home software development, with Oguchi, who lead Hitmaker, being the arcade counterpart. Sonic Team produced the high selling Sonic games and Phantasy Star Online, which won several awards within the Japanese game industry. Hitmaker was attributed the successful card arcade games in Japan that Sega was developing at the time, which started with Derby Owners Club and continued with World Club Champion Football, Mushiking: The King of Beetles and Love & Berry: Dress up and Dance!. Particularly Mushiking and Love & Berry supported Sega with very strong sales in the Japanese market, although Hitmaker was not involved with those titles. Amusement Vision, led by Toshihiro Nagoshi, was not very involved with Dreamcast games, however landed a hit with Super Monkey Ball on the Nintendo Gamecube and was involved with Nintendo management when dealing with them for the development of F-Zero GX. Nagoshi observed Nintendo management from the bottom all the way to the top,and was very surprised with how uniform the opinions at the company were, saying "no wonder we lost!".[68] This activity also made him very favourable for a management position within Sega. However, Nagoshi saw himself as sort of an in-between of Oguchi and Naka, and not on the same level as them.[69] Sega did not make anymore custom hardware on its own after the Sega Hikaru arcade board in 2001,[4] however many tenured engineers continued to work on Sega arcade technologies such as card systems, internet infrastructure and future arcade boards such as the Xbox-based Chihiro.[70][71][5] Many hardware developers also joined pachinko and pachislot company Sammy Corporation, who soon merged with Sega. Hideki Sato pushed for leftover Dreamcast parts being used as displays in the machines that Sammy develops, including the very successful Fist of the North Star pachinko machines.[72]

In 2003, Oguchi became president of Sega,[73] and multiple studios were merged into another,[74][75] as several developers left Sega during the era of spunning off their development studios. Including Nakagawa from WOW Entertainment[76] and Mizuguchi. Yu Suzuki formed his own studio, Digital Rex, but within Sega.[77] The development studios merged back into Sega on July 1 of 2004.[78] Visual Concepts was sold to Take Two Interactive in 2005.[53]

2000–2002

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Sega_development_studios
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Studio Division Members From Headed By Notable Titles Ref(s)
WOW Entertainment Inc. R&D Holdings,

Sega Corporation

Sega AM1 R&D Rikiya Nakagawa [79]
Sega AM2 Co., Ltd./AM2 of CRI Same as before Yu Suzuki [79]
Hitmaker Co., Ltd. Sega AM3 R&D Hisao Oguchi [79]
Amusement Vision Ltd. Sega AM11 R&D Toshihiro Nagoshi [79]
Sega Rosso Co., Ltd. Sega AM12 R&D Kenji Sasaki [79]