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On the 12th of December 1991, Sega released a CDROM-unit called "Mega CD" ("Sega CD" in the USA) to support the dying Mega Drive in Japan. It had another 68000 CPU, additional RAM, a custom graphics processor and a new sound chip which made even more complex games possible. However, the price of the hardware was very high (49800 Yen, approx. 500$), and the first games (Earnest Evans & Sol Feace) definitely weren´t worth this much money. Again, Sega made the mistake to release a new system without a top-selling game. But a few months later, with the release of Game Arts´ fantastic RPG Lunar, the sales increased noticeably and other companies began to develop software for the system.

 

At the end of 1992, the device reached the USA, with a slightly better software line-up (Batman Returns, Sewer Shark etc.) than at the Japanese release. But the system was still far too pricey at the beginning, and only few companies announced games for the system.

But fortunately, the Genesis itself was a very strong system at that time in the US (mainly because the SNES was released too late), and so quite a lot of people bought the SCD nevertheless.

And this was definitely no mistake, because some of the best RPGs, namely Lunar - The Silver Star and Lunar - Eternal Blue were released for this system exclusively. Another great game is Snatcher by Konami, a very atmospherical cyberpunk graphic adventure.

During the years 1991 and 1996, approx. 3 million Sega CD units were sold world-wide, compared to 28,5 million Genesis/Mega Drive units.

Thanks to emulator authors like Steve, Gerrie, Stef and Quinn the system was revived and is now accessible for a larger audience such as PC or XBox users e.g. - Too bad a Sega CD emulator for the mac is still lacking!

A screenshot of Lunar - Eternal Blue

Snatcher screenshot #1

Snatcher screenshot #2


Games (all available games & my personal collection)

Sam Pettus´ SegaBase is a comprehensive list of all known Sega CD games, with additional information (publisher/game type) and sometimes reviews. If you want even more information, along with game reviews and screenshots, you definitely need to check out the online version of the SegaBase. Both resources can be found here.

My personal games collection amounts to 177 games at the moment. 92 of them are also available on compilation CDs (see link below for further details). If you have some games (especially Japanese) you don´t find in this list, please contact me - I´m always interested in a trade! 


Eidolon's Sega CD games collection (last updated: May 29th 2000) (16.57 Kb)


Contributors to this page: Pablo and Uber-fonzie .
Page last modified on Sat 26 of June, 2004 17:48:45 CEST by Pablo.

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Shoutbox

sith-smasher, 16:25 CEST, 2014/06/20: That's great! I don't know any http and that stuff though. :/ Snakey doesn't reply my tweets, even bd wishes. I hope he's not mad at me for sth; just very very busy. :(
Eidolon, 11:40 CEST, 2014/06/18: Don't worry, I'll keep a full local copy of the Inn Database and will probably re-publish it piece by piece on my new website. Help for this monstrous task would be appreciated though - currently, Pablo and Snake are "in" on it.
King, 01:37 CEST, 2014/06/14: Man, RIP.
Ultraviolet, 15:16 CEST, 2014/06/11: Gutted :'( Agree with MERLiX and TulioAdriano - it was a rich history too. RIP, man.
sith-smasher, 00:21 CEST, 2014/06/10: Wait... what?!?
tomman, 01:57 CEST, 2014/06/09: Damn...
TulioAdriano, 17:33 CEST, 2014/06/07: Can't we at least dump all pages and make it a static thing? There's so much history here...
MERLiX, 20:29 CEST, 2014/06/05: Sorry to see this place go.
xSoNiCx, 18:50 CEST, 2014/06/05: Yay, Snake! :)))
sith-smasher, 16:36 CEST, 2014/05/08: Sometimes I miss our talks. He's a really cool dude.
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