Difference between revisions of "Mega-Tech System"

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The '''Mega-Tech''' was an arcade cabinet that featured ten interchangeable Mega Drive or Master System games in an arcade cabinet, similar to Nintendo's PlayChoice-10 as coins can be inserted to increase gameplay time.  
 
The '''Mega-Tech''' was an arcade cabinet that featured ten interchangeable Mega Drive or Master System games in an arcade cabinet, similar to Nintendo's PlayChoice-10 as coins can be inserted to increase gameplay time.  
  
It was released in Europe in 1989 with some of the best titles at the time, such as ''Thunder Force II'', ''Altered Beast'', ''Tetris'', ''Last Battle'', ''Space Harrier II'', and ''Golden Axe''. Other popular Mega Drive games became availalbe as time passed, such as ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog (arcade game)|Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' and ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (arcade game)|Sonic the Hedgehog 2]]''. Eventually a few [[Master System]] games were ported, but the amount of games ported was small.
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It was released in Europe in 1989 with some of the best titles at the time, such as ''[[Thunder Force II]]'', ''[[Altered Beast]]'', ''[[Tetris]]'', ''[[Last Battle]]'', ''[[Space Harrier II]]'', and ''[[Golden Axe]]''. Other popular Mega Drive games became availalbe as time passed, such as ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog (arcade game)|Sonic the Hedgehog]]'' and ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (arcade game)|Sonic the Hedgehog 2]]''. Eventually a few [[Master System]] games were ported, but the amount of games ported was small.
  
 
The arcade cabinet housed two monitors, the bottom screen is where the gameplay was displayed, the top screen housed information, such as Gameplay time remaining (which flashes green when time runs short), the game list, instructions, and a short synopsis of each game.
 
The arcade cabinet housed two monitors, the bottom screen is where the gameplay was displayed, the top screen housed information, such as Gameplay time remaining (which flashes green when time runs short), the game list, instructions, and a short synopsis of each game.
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It was basically a Mega Drive with timer control for arcade operations but lacked expansion hardware which would allow for connectivity to the [[32X]] and [[Mega CD]]. The games supplied were stored in a cartridge which was the same shape used in Japan. The labels were silver and red and only had "Mega-Tech" printed on them.  These cartridges are not compatible with a regular Mega Drive/Genesis due to the extra information on them stored to run the second monitor, and differences in the length of the edge connector, number of pins, pinouts, and spacing. 8 Mega-Tech game cartridge ports were stored on the system.
 
It was basically a Mega Drive with timer control for arcade operations but lacked expansion hardware which would allow for connectivity to the [[32X]] and [[Mega CD]]. The games supplied were stored in a cartridge which was the same shape used in Japan. The labels were silver and red and only had "Mega-Tech" printed on them.  These cartridges are not compatible with a regular Mega Drive/Genesis due to the extra information on them stored to run the second monitor, and differences in the length of the edge connector, number of pins, pinouts, and spacing. 8 Mega-Tech game cartridge ports were stored on the system.
  
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==Games==
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Games released for Mega-Tech hardware include:
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*''[[After Burner]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Alien Storm]]''
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*''[[Alien Syndrome]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Altered Beast]]''
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*''[[Arnold Palmer Tournament Golf]]''
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*''[[Arrow Flash]]''
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*''[[Astro Warrior]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Bonanza Bros.]]''
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*''[[Columns]]''
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*''[[Crack Down]]''
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*''[[Cyber Police ESWAT: Enhanced Special Weapons and Tactics]]''
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*''[[Fire Shark]]''
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*''[[Forgotten Worlds]]''
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*''[[Ghouls'n Ghosts]]''
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*''[[Golden Axe]]''
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*''[[Golden Axe II]]''
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*''[[Great Football]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Great Golf]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Great Soccer]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Joe Montana II: Sports Talk Football]]''
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*''[[Kid Chameleon]]''
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*''[[Last Battle]]''
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*''[[Mario Lemieux Hockey]]''
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*''[[Michael Jackson's Moonwalker]]''
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*''[[Mystic Defender]]''
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*''[[Out Run]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Parlour Games]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Shadow Dancer]]''
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*''[[Shinobi]]'' (SMS)
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*''[[Sonic The Hedgehog]]''
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*''[[Sonic The Hedgehog]]''
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*''[[Sonic The Hedgehog 2]]''
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*''[[Space Harrier II]]''
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*''[[Streets of Rage]]''
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*''[[Super Hang-On]]''
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*''[[Super Monaco GP]]''
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*''[[Super Real Basketball]]''
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*''[[Super Thunder Blade]]''
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*''[[Tetris]]''
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*''[[The Revenge of Shinobi]]''
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*''[[Thunder Force II MD]]''
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*''[[Tommy Lasorda Baseball]]''
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*''[[Turbo Outrun]]''
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*''[[World Championship Soccer]]''
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*''[[Wrestle War]]''
  
 
{{MegaDrive}}
 
{{MegaDrive}}
  
 
[[Category:Mega Drive Hardware]]
 
[[Category:Mega Drive Hardware]]

Revision as of 12:58, 12 March 2010

Sega MegaTech arcade machine.

The Mega-Tech was an arcade cabinet that featured ten interchangeable Mega Drive or Master System games in an arcade cabinet, similar to Nintendo's PlayChoice-10 as coins can be inserted to increase gameplay time.

It was released in Europe in 1989 with some of the best titles at the time, such as Thunder Force II, Altered Beast, Tetris, Last Battle, Space Harrier II, and Golden Axe. Other popular Mega Drive games became availalbe as time passed, such as Sonic the Hedgehog and Sonic the Hedgehog 2. Eventually a few Master System games were ported, but the amount of games ported was small.

The arcade cabinet housed two monitors, the bottom screen is where the gameplay was displayed, the top screen housed information, such as Gameplay time remaining (which flashes green when time runs short), the game list, instructions, and a short synopsis of each game.

Hardware

Sega MegaTech hardware.

It was basically a Mega Drive with timer control for arcade operations but lacked expansion hardware which would allow for connectivity to the 32X and Mega CD. The games supplied were stored in a cartridge which was the same shape used in Japan. The labels were silver and red and only had "Mega-Tech" printed on them. These cartridges are not compatible with a regular Mega Drive/Genesis due to the extra information on them stored to run the second monitor, and differences in the length of the edge connector, number of pins, pinouts, and spacing. 8 Mega-Tech game cartridge ports were stored on the system.

Games

Games released for Mega-Tech hardware include:


Sega Mega Drive
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