Encyclopedia > Sonic the Hedgehog (Sonic the Hedgehog character)

  Article Content

Sonic the Hedgehog

Redirected from Sonic the Hedgehog (Sonic the Hedgehog character)

Sonic the Hedgehog is the flagship character for video game, arcade game (and one-time home console) company Sega, which has released a series of video games in which he either stars or plays a role.

Sonic is a blue hedgehog who lives on the planet Earth (Mobius in various American sources). He has the ability to run very fast. His blue pigmentation was explained in an issue of gaming magazine Gamepro as being the result of getting caught in an explosion involving cobalt, but this is probably not canonical. There is an alternative explanation in Stay Sonic: Official Sega Handbook, a book about Sonic the Hedgehog written by Mike Pattenden. At some point it was divulged (probably from an American source) that Sonic enjoys eating chili dogs.

The premise of the games revolves around Dr. Eggman[?] (Dr. Robotnik[?] in earlier American releases) trying to take over the world by turning the animals into robots called Badniks[?]. Sonic is charged with saving them. In later games he is joined by Miles "Tails" Prower, Amy Rose, Knuckles the Echidna and a host of others.

Interestingly, one of a class of genes involved in fruit fly embryonic development, called hedgehog genes after the name given to the first member of this class discovered, has been named sonic hedgehog after this character.

Table of contents

Games involving Sonic the Hedgehog

For the Sega Genesis:

For Sega CD:

For the Sega Master System:

For the Sega Game Gear:

For the Sega Pico:

For the Sega 32X:

For the Sega Saturn:

For the Sega Dreamcast:

For the PC:

For SNK Neo Geo Pocket:

For Nintendo Game Boy Advance:

For Nintendo Gamecube:

For Sony Playstation 2:

For X-Box:

For Arcade:

Games Sonic Characters have cameoed in:



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Digital Rights Management

... by the copyright holder. The context is most commonly digital (ie, as in a computer or computerized device), hence the 'digital' in DRM. In contrast to existing legal ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 26.6 ms