Sega Wow

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
(Redirected from AM7)
Jump to: navigation, search
Sega Wow
Subsidiary
Industry Video games
Founded 2000
Founder Rikiya Nakagawa
Noriyoshi Ohba
Defunct 2004
Owner Sega

Sega Wow was a division of Japanese video game developer Sega.

History

In 2000 all of Sega's in-house Consumer Software (CS) and Amusement Machine (AM) R&D departments were separated from the main company and established on 9 semi-autonomous subsidiaries, with each subsidiary getting an elected president as a studio head.[1] However, for more financial stability, Sega began consolidating its studios into six main ones (Sega Wow, Sega AM2, Hitmaker, Amusement Vision, Smilebit, Sonic Team) and merged them back into a uniform R&D structure in 2004.

WOW Entertainment was headed by Rikiya Nakagawa and Kazunari Tsukamoto. In addition of an continued arcade line-up, WOW Entertainment made efforts on the consumer market with the SEGA GT racing series, an effort to compete against Sony's Gran Turismo. They also made efforts on the Game Boy Advance.

Overworks was formed from CS2, and headed by Noriyoshi Ohba. Out of the gate it came out with Skies of Arcadia for Dreamcast and GameCube, and also continued the Sakura Taisen series. In 2002, it came with the Shinobi reboot on PlayStation 2.

In 2003 it was renamed to SEGA WOW and absorbed Overworks. The line-up of action games Blood Will Tell, Nightshade and the RPG Sakura Taisen became part of SEGA WOW. By 2004, Sega Wow had 215 employees which were split across consumer and arcade development after the integration back into Sega.[2]

List of games

WOW Entertainment

Arcade
Dreamcast
Xbox
Game Boy Advance
PlayStation 2
PC

Overworks

Dreamcast
PlayStation 2
  • Shinobi (2002)
  • Online Games: Dai Guru Guru Onsen (2002)
GameCube
PC

Sega Wow

PlayStation 2
GameCube
Xbox
Game Boy Advance
  • Lilliput Oukoku: Lillimoni to Issho Puni! (2004)
PC

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.