Difference between revisions of "Club Specialty Overseas, Inc."

From Sega Retro

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}}{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}'''{{fileref|Fraud and Corruption in Management of Military Club Systems 1969 (United States Government Printing Office).pdf|page=1840}}, also known as '''CSOI''', was an amusement machine distributor headquartered in Panama with connections to the earliest incarnation of [[Sega]], [[Service Games, Hawaii]]. It was headed by [[Richard Stewart]]{{fileref|Fraud and Corruption in Management of Military Club Systems 1969 (United States Government Printing Office).pdf|page=1843}}{{magref|cb|1970-03-21|71}}.
 
}}{{sub-stub}}'''{{PAGENAME}}'''{{fileref|Fraud and Corruption in Management of Military Club Systems 1969 (United States Government Printing Office).pdf|page=1840}}, also known as '''CSOI''', was an amusement machine distributor headquartered in Panama with connections to the earliest incarnation of [[Sega]], [[Service Games, Hawaii]]. It was headed by [[Richard Stewart]]{{fileref|Fraud and Corruption in Management of Military Club Systems 1969 (United States Government Printing Office).pdf|page=1843}}{{magref|cb|1970-03-21|71}}.
  

Revision as of 17:45, 17 May 2022


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Club Specialty Overseas, Inc.[1], also known as CSOI, was an amusement machine distributor headquartered in Panama with connections to the earliest incarnation of Sega, Service Games, Hawaii. It was headed by Richard Stewart[2][3].

Initially Service Games was a distributor of products in what it called the "Pacific Ocean area", however by the late 1950s, its Japanese arm, Service Games, Japan was beginning to manufacture products of its own, and the focus of the business changed. As such, CSOI was likely established to distribute these products across the world (including the areas formerly covered by Service Games directly), establishing channels in the United Kingdom and The Netherlands by the early 1960s.

CSOI continued to act as "worldwide" distributor of Service Games (and later Sega) products throughout the 1960s. Sega would handle the domestic Japanese market, and after re-establishing itself in the US, would handle that territory too. From May 31st, 1973, Sega ditched CSOI and began working with local distribution partners directly[4].

References