Difference between revisions of "VR-1"

From Sega Retro

(fixed incorrect info and added a few significant pieces - there was indeed another game created for it, still trying to source info on this and its development history)
(rewrite, added links, added preservation section)
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{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}''' is a virtual reality motion simulator attraction developed by [[Sega AM3]] and [[Sega AM5]]. The attraction was a key aspect of [[Sega]]'s indoor theme park venues during the 1990s, and provided unparalleled VR technology for the time to visitors.
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{{stub}}The '''{{PAGENAME}}''' or '''Virtual Reality-1''' is an interactive [[wikipedia:virtual reality|virtual reality]] [[wikipedia:simulator ride|motion simulator]] attraction developed by [[Sega AM3]] and [[Sega AM5]]. Released in July 1994, it was frequently installed in the company’s flagship arcade venues such as [[Joypolis]] and [[SegaWorld]].
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The hardware is unrelated to the similarly-named [[Sega VR]].
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
 
===Development===
 
===Development===
The simulator’s Mega Visor Display, created by Sega AM3 alongside UK-based [[Virtuality]], would see later use in 1995’s [[Dennou Senki Net Merc|Sega Net Merc]] hardware. Its technology is not to be confused with [[Sega VR]], the unreleased [[Sega Mega Drive]] add-on developed during the same period by [[Sega of America]].
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The simulator’s ''Mega Visor Display'', created by [[Sega AM3]] alongside UK-based [[Virtuality]], would see later use in 1995’s [[Dennou Senki Net Merc|Sega Net Merc]] hardware.
  
Two games were created for the attraction, 1994's ''[[Space Mission]]'' and 1995's ''[[Planet Adventure]]'',{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991011040009/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/vr1planeta.html}} before it was retired in favour of newer simulation systems.
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Two games were released for the attraction, 1994's ''[[Space Mission]]'' and 1995's ''[[Planet Adventure]]'',{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/19991011040009/http://www.sega.co.jp/sega/atp/atc/vr1planeta.html}} before it was later retired in favor of newer simulators.
  
 
===Locations===
 
===Locations===
VR-1 was first installed at [[Yokohama Joypolis]] as one of its premier features on opening day in July 1994. The attraction provided  much of the basis for the futuristic theming utilised by several of Sega's indoor theme park venues during the mid 1990s, with it making use of the most technologically advanced hardware within them.
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''VR-1'' was first installed at [[Yokohama Joypolis]], starring as one of the park’s feature attractions at it’s July 1994 opening.
  
 
* [[Yokohama Joypolis]]
 
* [[Yokohama Joypolis]]
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* [[Sega World Sydney]]
 
* [[Sega World Sydney]]
  
No VR-1 units are currently thought to remain in operation or exist, after the subsequent downsizing and closures of the venues that housed it during the late 1990s and early 2000s.
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No ''VR-1'' units are currently thought to remain in operation.
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===Preservation===
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After the subsequent downsizing and closures of the venues that housed it during the late 1990s and early 2000s, there remain no known locations where the attraction remains preserved (besides perhaps the developers). Several instances of Mega Visor Displays found their way into private hands, but both the hardware’s games remain unpreserved.
  
 
===Legacy===
 
===Legacy===
VR-1 has retrospectively been recognised as utilising one of the most advanced HMD headsets of its generation. It subsequently inspired the designs of several other examples, ensured Sega's reputation as an early virtual reality pioneer, and set a significant benchmark for the medium, which is not thought to have been surpassed until the late 2010s.{{ref|https://www.vrfocus.com/2020/07/the-virtual-arena-blast-from-the-past-the-vr-1/}}
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The VR-1, and specifically it’s Mega Visor Display, has been recognized as one of the most advanced [[wikipedia:head-mounted display|head-mounted displays]] of its generation. It subsequently inspired the designs of several other examples, ensured Sega's reputation as an early [[wikipedia:virtual reality|virtual reality|]] pioneer, and set a benchmark not thought to have been surpassed until the late 2010s.{{ref|https://www.vrfocus.com/2020/07/the-virtual-arena-blast-from-the-past-the-vr-1/}}
 
 
 
==Games==
 
==Games==
  

Revision as of 03:21, 7 April 2021

n/a

VR1 Arcade.jpg
VR-1
System(s): Medium-scale attraction
Publisher: Sega
Developer:
Release Date RRP Code






































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The VR-1 or Virtual Reality-1 is an interactive virtual reality motion simulator attraction developed by Sega AM3 and Sega AM5. Released in July 1994, it was frequently installed in the company’s flagship arcade venues such as Joypolis and SegaWorld.

The hardware is unrelated to the similarly-named Sega VR.

History

Development

The simulator’s Mega Visor Display, created by Sega AM3 alongside UK-based Virtuality, would see later use in 1995’s Sega Net Merc hardware.

Two games were released for the attraction, 1994's Space Mission and 1995's Planet Adventure,[3] before it was later retired in favor of newer simulators.

Locations

VR-1 was first installed at Yokohama Joypolis, starring as one of the park’s feature attractions at it’s July 1994 opening.

No VR-1 units are currently thought to remain in operation.

Preservation

After the subsequent downsizing and closures of the venues that housed it during the late 1990s and early 2000s, there remain no known locations where the attraction remains preserved (besides perhaps the developers). Several instances of Mega Visor Displays found their way into private hands, but both the hardware’s games remain unpreserved.

Legacy

The VR-1, and specifically it’s Mega Visor Display, has been recognized as one of the most advanced head-mounted displays of its generation. It subsequently inspired the designs of several other examples, ensured Sega's reputation as an early virtual reality| pioneer, and set a benchmark not thought to have been surpassed until the late 2010s.[4]

Games

Patents

Promotional material

Videos

References


Sega VR
Topics Technical specifications | Magazine articles | Promotional material | Ono-Sendai Corporation
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