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Successor to the System 1 and System 2 boards, released in 1985 [42] [43] Nearly 40 titles released [42] Four different versions of System 16 were made [42] Served as the basis for design of the Mega Drive/Genesis [44] [45] Uses a Motorola 68000 and a Zilog Z80 as CPU processors [44] Limited to 128 sprites on screen at a time [42] Fantasy Zone ...
Sega System 16 Action Fighter ( アクション ファイター ) is an overhead vehicular combat game released by Sega for arcades in 1986. It was ported to the Master System the same year, and then to the Amiga , Amstrad CPC , Atari ST , Commodore 64 , ZX Spectrum and IBM PC compatible computers.
Sega also produced a limited number of arcade units running real System 16 hardware to promote the game's release. A Nintendo 3DS port of this 16-bit version of Fantasy Zone II was released in Japan in 2014 and internationally in 2015.
Sega (Team Shinobi) System 16 Dynamite Düx: Sega (AM2) Gain Ground: Action, Strategy: Sega System 24 Galaxy Force: Galaxy Force II: Rail shooter Y Board Hot Rod: Racing System 24 Passing Shot: Sports System 16 Power Drift: Racing Sega (AM2) Y Board Scramble Spirits: Shoot 'em up Sega System 24 Tetris: Puzzle System 16 UFO Senshi Youko-chan ...
The system was later redesigned by JVC and released as the X'Eye in North America in September 1994. [67] A Pioneer LaserActive add-on pack, developed by Sega, allows the system to play Genesis and Sega CD games. [68] Aiwa released the CSD-GM1, a combination Genesis/Sega CD unit built into a boombox.
Sega System 16 arcade boards ADPCM, Speech synthesis chip μPD7759 1987 1 8 8,000 Sega System 16B and System C2 arcade boards, Sega Pico console ADPCM, Speech synthesis chip NVIDIA: MCPX: 2001 64 16 48,000 Microsoft Xbox console 3D sound support, Dolby Pro Logic, DTS, DSP, MIDI DLS2 Support Oki Electric Industry: Oki MSM5205 1982 1 12 32,000
Dynamite Düx is a 1988 beat 'em up developed by Sega AM2 and released by Sega in Japanese and European arcades.Produced by Yu Suzuki and with music composed by Hiroshi Kawaguchi, the game uses the Sega System 16 arcade board, the same board used for Golden Axe and Altered Beast.
With the new ESRB rating system in place, Nintendo reconsidered its position for the release of Mortal Kombat II, and this time became the preferred version among reviewers. [11] [12] The Toy Retail Sales Tracking Service reported that during the key shopping month of November 1994, 63% of all 16-bit video game consoles sold were Sega systems. [13]