Difference between revisions of "Sega AM6"

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{{Company
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{{CompanyBob
 
| logo=
 
| logo=
| width=
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| division=[[Sega Enterprises, Ltd.|Sega Enterprises]]
| founded=199x
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| founded=1991
| defunct=2000
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| defunct=1999
| tseries=
 
 
| mergedwith=
 
| mergedwith=
| mergedinto=[[Smilebit]] (2000)
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| mergedinto=[[Sega Mechatronics]] (1999)
 
| headquarters=Japan
 
| headquarters=Japan
 
}}
 
}}
'''Sega Consumer Research and Development 1''' or '''Sega CS1''' is a video game research and development division within [[Sega]]. Sega is thought to have consumer divisions every since they began developing for non-arcade systems, however it unknown which games were attached to CS1 during the SG-1000, Sega Master System and Sega Mega Drive era. During 1994, and the Saturn launch, CS1 gained notierity due to it's Panzer Dragoon and Sega Victory Goal games, which were showcases for the Saturn at the time. CS1 had two seperate sub-divisions known as Team Ara which focused on sports related games, and Team Andromeda which produced the Panzer Dragoon games. In 1995, Sega also established a PC division internally, dedicated to porting PC titles. In 2000 all of these divisions came together to establish [[Smilebit]].
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'''Amusement Machine Research and Development Department #6''' (第六AM研究開発部), commonly known as '''AM R&D #6''' or '''AM6''', was a research and development division within [[Sega]]. The division was created in 1990 when it spun off from [[Sega AM4]] with the attraction-focused [[AM5]].{{ref|http://web.archive.org/web/20030506055252/http://www.sega-mechatro.com/whats/history/his_side.html}} It similarly specialized in development of one type of amusement machinery, [[:category:medal games|medal games]].{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}}
  
With the intergration back into Sega in 2004. The team has changed with non-sports operation becoming merged with [[Amusement Vision]], and Amusement Vision staff completly loosing it's arcade focus. Therefore the current CS1 is a combination of Amusement Vision and Smilebit. For a brief time the Yakuza development team were known as New Entertainment however that name changed to CS1. In 2011, the Yakuza team got it's own branding as Ryu Ga Gotoku studio.
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Unlike AM4, AM6 developed both hardware and software, notable examples including ''[[Royal Ascot]]''.{{fileref|SSM_JP_19960614_1996-09.pdf|page=145}} It would also collaborate with other AM divisions, such as [[AM3]] on ''[[Bingo Party]]''.{{fileref|DCM_JP_20000922_2000-30.pdf|page=94}} With the exception of a select few titles, most of AM6's produce remained largely exclusive to Japan, only seeing occasional exports under the overseas [[Sega Gaming]]  division during the mid 1990s.{{intref|Press release: 1994-03-16: SODAK GAMING AND SEGA ENTER INTO DISTRIBUTORSHIP AGREEMENT}}
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In 1999, AM6 merged with AM4 to become [[Sega Mechatronics]].{{fileref|DCM_JP_19991119_1999-36.pdf|page=15}}
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==Members==
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*[[Tomoji Miyamoto]]
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*[[Kazuhito Shimizu]]
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*[[Naoyuki Sato]]
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*[[Yuji Nagao]]
  
 
==Softography==
 
==Softography==
 
{{multicol|
 
{{multicol|
===[[Sega Saturn]]===
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{{CompanyHistoryAll|Sega AM6}}
* [[Greatest Nine]] (1995)
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}}
* [[Greatest Nine 96]] (1996)
 
* [[J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou!]] (1996)
 
* [[J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 2]] (1997)
 
* [[Panzer Dragoon]] (1995)
 
* [[Panzer Dragoon Zwei]] (1996)
 
* [[Panzer Dragoon Saga]] (1998)
 
* [[Pro Yakyuu Greatest Nine 97]] (1997)
 
* [[Pro Yakyuu Greatest Nine 98]] (1998)
 
* [[Sega International Victory Goal]] (1995)
 
* [[Sega Worldwide Soccer 97]] (1997)
 
* [[Sega Worldwide Soccer 98]] (1998)
 
  
=== [[PlayStation 2]] ===
 
* [[Derby Uma o Tsukurou! 5]] (2005)
 
* [[J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 5]] (2007)
 
* [[Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Europe Championship]] (2006)
 
* [[Pro Yakyuu Team o Tsukurou! 3]] (2005)
 
* [[Super Monkey Ball Deluxe]] (2005)
 
* [[Virtua Pro Football]] (2006)
 
* [[Yakuza]] (2005)
 
* [[Yakuza 2]] (2006)
 
  
=== [[Xbox]] ===
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{{multicol|
* [[Spikeout: Battle Street]] (2005)
 
* [[Super Monkey Ball Deluxe]] (2005)
 
  
=== [[Nintendo DS]] ===
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===Royal Ascot BD===
* [[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games]] (2007)
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* ''[[Royal Ascot]]'' (1992) (with [[Sega AM3]], [[Sega AM4]])
* [[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games]] (2009)
 
* [[Super Monkey Ball: Touch & Roll]] (2005)
 
* [[Pro Yakyuu Team o Tsukurou!]] (2008)
 
* [[Soccer Tsuku DS: Touch and Direct]] (2008)
 
* [[Soccer Tsuku DS: World Challenge 2010]] (2010)
 
* [[Zombie Shiki - Eigo Ryoku Sosei Jutsu: English of the Dead]] (2008)
 
  
=== [[PlayStation Portable]] ===
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===Western Dream BD===  
* [[J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 6: Pride of J]] (2009)
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* ''[[Western Dream]]'' (1992) (with [[Sega AM4]])
* [[J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 7: Euro Plus]] (2011)
 
* J.League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 8 Euro Plus (2013)
 
* [[Kurohyou: Ryu ga Gotoku Shinshou]] (2010)
 
* [[Kurohyou 2: Ryu ga Gotoku Ashura Hen]] (2012)  
 
  
=== [[Xbox 360]] ===
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===[[X Board]]===
* [[Binary Domain]] (2012)
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* ''[[Caribbean Boule]]'' (1992) (with [[Sega AM4]], [[Sega AM4]])
  
=== [[Wii]] ===
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===Bingo Party BD/M1===
* [[Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games]] (2011)
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* ''[[Bingo Party]]'' (1993) (with [[Sega AM4]])
* [[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games]] (2007)
 
* [[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games]] (2009)
 
* [[Super Monkey Ball Banana Blitz]] (2006)
 
* [[Super Monkey Ball: Step & Roll]] (2009)
 
  
=== [[PlayStation 3]] ===
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===Castle Coaster BD===
* [[Binary Domain]] (2012)
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* ''[[Castle Coaster]]'' (1995) (with [[Sega AM4]])
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku 0: Chikai no Basho]] (2015)
 
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku: Ishin!]] (2014)
 
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku Kenzan!]] (2008)
 
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku 1&2 HD Edition]] (2012)
 
* [[Soccer Tsuku: Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou!]] (2013)
 
* [[Yakuza 3]] (2009)
 
* [[Yakuza 4]] (2010)
 
* [[Yakuza 5]] (2012)
 
* [[Yakuza: Dead Souls]] (2011)
 
  
=== [[Nintendo 3DS]] ===
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===G-MAIN/M1===
* [[Super Monkey Ball 3D]] (2011)
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* ''[[Bingo Planet]]'' (1997) (with [[Sega AM4]])
  
=== [[PlayStation Vita]] ===
 
* [[Soccer Tsuku: Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou!]] (2013)
 
* [[Super Monkey Ball: Banana Splitz]]  (2012)
 
  
=== [[Wii U]] ===
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===C-GAL/[[Sega Titan Video]]===
* [[Mario & Sonic at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games]] (2013)
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* ''[[Fantasy Zone (medal game)]]'' (1997) (with [[Sega AM4]])
* [[Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games]] (2015)
 
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku 1&2 HD Edition]] (2013)
 
  
=== [[PlayStation 4]] ===
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===Dedicated===
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku: Ishin!]] (2014)
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*''[[Golden Wave]]'' (1989)
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku Kiwami]] (2016)
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*''[[Bingo Carnival]]'' (1993) (with [[Sega AM4]])
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku 0]] (2015)
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}}
* [[Ryu ga Gotoku 6]] (2016)
 
  
=== PC ===
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==Magazine articles==
* [[Baku Baku Animal]]  (1996)
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{{mainArticle|{{PAGENAME}}/Magazine articles}}
* [[Daytona USA Evolution]] (1997)
 
* [[Last Bronx]] (1998)
 
* [[Manx TT Super Bike]] (1997)
 
* [[Panzer Dragoon]] (1996)
 
* [[Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Online]] (2007)
 
* Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Online 2 (2008)
 
* [[Sega Rally Championship]] (1997)
 
* [[Sega Rally 2]] (1999)
 
* [[Sega Touring Car Championship]] (1998)
 
* [[Sega Worldwide Soccer PC]] (1997)
 
* [[Sky Target]] (1997)
 
* [[Sonic the Hedgehog CD]] (1996)
 
* [[The House of the Dead]] (1998)
 
* [[The Typing of the Dead 2]] (2008)
 
* [[Virtua Cop]] (1996)
 
* [[Virtua Cop 2]] (1997)
 
* [[Virtua Fighter Remix]] (1996)
 
  
=== [[iOS]] ===
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==References==
* [[Kingdom Conquest]] (2010)
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<references />
|cols=3}}
 
  
 
{{clear}}
 
{{clear}}
{{SegaDevs}}
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{{SoJ}}

Latest revision as of 09:12, 3 February 2024

Notavailable.svg
Sega AM6
Division of Sega Enterprises
Founded: 1991
Defunct: 1999
Merged into: Sega Mechatronics (1999)
Headquarters:
Japan

Amusement Machine Research and Development Department #6 (第六AM研究開発部), commonly known as AM R&D #6 or AM6, was a research and development division within Sega. The division was created in 1990 when it spun off from Sega AM4 with the attraction-focused AM5.[1] It similarly specialized in development of one type of amusement machinery, medal games.[2]

Unlike AM4, AM6 developed both hardware and software, notable examples including Royal Ascot.[2] It would also collaborate with other AM divisions, such as AM3 on Bingo Party.[3] With the exception of a select few titles, most of AM6's produce remained largely exclusive to Japan, only seeing occasional exports under the overseas Sega Gaming division during the mid 1990s.[4]

In 1999, AM6 merged with AM4 to become Sega Mechatronics.[5]

Members

Softography


Royal Ascot BD

Western Dream BD

X Board

Bingo Party BD/M1

Castle Coaster BD

G-MAIN/M1


C-GAL/Sega Titan Video

Dedicated

Magazine articles

Main article: Sega AM6/Magazine articles.

References


Timeline of Sega of Japan research and development divisions








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