The development of the Sega CD was top secret; game programmers didn't know what they were designing for until the Sega CD was finally revealed at Tokyo Toy Show in Japan. The Sega CD was desgned to be in competition with the Turbografx-16[?], which had a CD module, not the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. The Sega CD was first released in Japan in 1991 where it was called the "Mega-CD." Initially, it was a great success because of the inherent advantages of CDs (high storage space and low media cost) and the fact that it had a nice RPG base.
The Sega CD was first released in the U.S in November 1992 for $299. Several titles were available at launch including the controvesial Night Trap. A total of 149 games have been released for the Sega CD in the U.S. Game production was mostly discontinued from 1995-1996. The Sega CD floundered in the USA, partly due to the cost. There just was not a great enough value for the price. Tangibly, game quality was little improved. The sound was often better if it included a CD audio track, but for the most part, conventional games looked the same. Sega insisted on licensing and producing primarily "full motion video" games similar to earlier laserdisc games, that were universally panned by game reviewers. The single speed CD drive added load times to all games, and the 64-color graphics and underpowered processor (for video rendering) made the full-motion games look terrible. Worst of all, they simply no fun to play. Sega wanted to showcase the power of the Sega CD, and so focused on the "FMV" games rather than importing "extended" games that only expanded ordinary games by taking advantage of the extra storage space of the CD media. Perhaps if the quality of the motion video games were better, this plan might have succeeded.
The Sega CD exists in the following models:
What it adds to the Genesis:
Specs:
Main CPU: Motorola 68000 @ 12.5 MHz
Bios Version Machine 1.00 Original Mega CD 1.10 Original Sega CD, Motorized Drive 2.00 Sega CD2/Mega CD2 2.05 Sega CD2 2.10 Sega CD2 2.21 Sega CDX
Access time: 800 ms Sound Circuitry:
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