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Sonic Mega Collection [a] is a video game compilation developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega in 2002 for the GameCube.It is a compilation of several Sonic the Hedgehog games originally released for the Genesis, along with a few other Sega-published titles for the system.
Also includes four unlockable Genesis games unrelated to Sonic. [168] Released on the PlayStation 2, Xbox, and PC as Sonic Mega Collection Plus, which added six of the twelve Game Gear Sonic games: Sonic the Hedgehog, Sonic Chaos, Sonic Drift, Sonic Labyrinth, Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine, and Sonic Blast. [169]
Sonic Gems Collection is a compilation of obscure video games published by Sega for various consoles, such as the Sega CD, Sega Saturn, and Game Gear.It primarily focuses on Sonic the Hedgehog games, including Sonic CD (1993), [1] Sonic the Fighters (1996), Sonic R (1997), and six of the twelve Sonic games released for the Game Gear, with the other six having been included in the previous ...
[1] [2] The 1991 release of Sonic the Hedgehog is considered significant in video game history, as it increased the Sega Genesis's sales and Sega displaced Nintendo as the leading video game company. [3] Some Sonic Team games, such as the Sonic games and Nights, are considered among the greatest of all time. [4] [5] On this list, games are ...
Sonic Mega Collection: GameCube 1.453 million [f] Sonic Heroes: PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube 3.41 million [505] [506] [507] Sonic Mega Collection Plus: PlayStation 2, Xbox 2 million [508] 2005 Shadow the Hedgehog: PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube 2.06 million [509] [510] 2006 Sonic the Hedgehog: Mobile: 8 million in US & EU [511] Sonic the Hedgehog
Paramount Pictures is prepping “Sonic the Hedgehog 4,” with the studio anticipating a spring 2027 release date for the latest entry in the family-friendly franchise. The news comes as “Sonic ...
In 1992, Mega ranked Sonic as their third-favorite Genesis game. [126] In 1995, Flux rated the game fourth in its "Top 100 Video Games." [127] In 1996, GamesMaster ranked the game 78th on their "Top 100 Games of All Time." [128] In 2016, The Strong National Museum of Play inducted Sonic the Hedgehog to its World Video Game Hall of Fame. [129]
In early 1994, Sega released Sonic 3, which had been developed in secret at a secure facility in Silicon Valley, thousands of miles from Sega's Japanese headquarters. Nine-year-old Ben was "very impressed," he says now, noting the "updated design, expansive levels and the fact you could turn Super Sonic" -- when the hedgehog gained speed and ...