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Quiz about The Saga of Sega
Quiz about The Saga of Sega

The Saga of Sega Trivia Quiz

Sega History, 1940-2001

Sega is a well-known video game brand, but it didn't start that way! Here are ten events in the early history of Sega, from its beginnings to the start of the 21st century. Place them in the right order if you can!
This is a renovated/adopted version of an old quiz by author ShinChaos

An ordering quiz by lordprescott. Estimated time: 3 mins.
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Author
lordprescott
Time
3 mins
Type
Order Quiz
Quiz #
29,895
Updated
Nov 11 23
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
41
Last 3 plays: Guest 109 (10/10), matthewpokemon (10/10), Guest 108 (10/10).
Mobile instructions: Press on an answer on the right. Then, press on the question it matches on the left.
(a) Drag-and-drop from the right to the left, or (b) click on a right side answer, and then click on its destination box to move it.
What's the Correct Order?Choices
1.   
(First, 1940)
Sega became a developer for third parties.
2.   
(1954)
Sega licensed the game "Frogger".
3.   
(1966)
Sega released its first video-based game, "Pong-Tron".
4.   
(1973)
Martin Bromley, Irving Bromberg and James Humpert founded Standard Games.
5.   
(1981)
Sega produced its first electro-mechanical (EM) arcade game.
6.   
(1983)
Sega developed its first home-use video game console.
7.   
(1988)
Sega released the Sega Genesis home entertainment system.
8.   
(1990)
Sega's last video game console was released.
9.   
(1998)
The name of Sega was first used on the slot machine Diamond Star.
10.   
(Last, 2001)
The character of Sonic the Hedgehog was launched.





Most Recent Scores
Mar 16 2024 : Guest 109: 10/10
Mar 08 2024 : matthewpokemon: 10/10
Feb 28 2024 : Guest 108: 10/10
Feb 25 2024 : Guest 68: 9/10

Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Martin Bromley, Irving Bromberg and James Humpert founded Standard Games.

Martin Bromley, Irving Bromberg and James Humpert were three Americans who founded Standard Games in Hawaii. The company was formed to manufacture coin slot machine games, specifically for soldiers during World War II.

In 1946, after the resolution of World War II, they renamed Standard Games as Service Games, denoting the games' use by the military services. The company received a hit that changed its history forever, however, when the United States made coin slot games illegal in 1952. This prompted the company to source itself in Tokyo, Japan, to form Service Games of Japan. They still catered to United States military that was based in Japan.
2. The name of Sega was first used on the slot machine Diamond Star.

Sega was an abbreviation of Service Games. Service Games of Japan had dissolved in 1960 to avoid trouble with the United States government, but had reformed in two different businesses: Nihon Goraku Bussan and Nihon Kikai Seizō.

Also in 1954, David Rosen began the company of Rosen Enterprises, which specialized in importing photo booths and coin-operated games. In 1965, his company merged with Nihon Goraku Bussan to form Sega Enterprises, Ltd.
3. Sega produced its first electro-mechanical (EM) arcade game.

Electro-mechanical games are those that function through a combination of electronics and user motion. This particular game was "Periscope", which was made to simulate a submarine, including with sound effects and lights. The player operated the "submarine", attempting to shoot ships it came into contact with.

The game was a hit worldwide, and Sega manufactured several per year. The games were placed in locations that hadn't seen arcade games before, such as malls. One play cost 25 cents.
4. Sega released its first video-based game, "Pong-Tron".

"Pong-Tron" was similar to the earlier game, "Pong", which was manufactured by the company Atari. First released in 1972, the game involved moving two "paddles" to imitate a game of ping-pong with an electronic "ball". The game was successful, and Sega released its version the next year.

"Pong-Tron", however, was released specifically for Japan; Sega had stopped importing its games in 1970 due to problems with piracy.
5. Sega licensed the game "Frogger".

"Frogger" was Sega's most popular game to be released after "Periscope". Its aim was a little bit different, though: players "battled" against busy traffic and other pitfalls to see that frogs made it across streets and other hazards!

"Frogger" has had many sequel and spin-off games, notably "Frogger II: ThreeeDeep!" in 1984.
6. Sega developed its first home-use video game console.

Sega's first home video game console was developed after getting the idea from Nintendo, which was developing its own at the time. Developed alongside Sega's first computer console, the SC-3000, the video game console was called the SG-1000 (the SG stood for Sega Game, of course!). It was redesigned and rereleased several times until 1986.

To use the console, gamers would insert either a cassette program, a My Card game, or a ROM cartridge, depending on the game and the console set. The SG-1000 series sold over 1 million copies!
7. Sega released the Sega Genesis home entertainment system.

The Sega Genesis was Sega's first 16-bit color video game home entertainment system, and was meant to be a successor to Sega's previous system, the Master System. It was released in Japan in October of 1988, and then in North America in August of 1989.

Thanks in part to the creation of the character Sonic the Hedgehog, who was developed shortly after Genesis, Sega's system outsold the Nintendo equivalent for four successive Christmases, prompting a steep drop in Nintendo's stock worth. Although Sega discontinued Genesis in 1999, Tectoy sold a variant for years until it was finally discontinued in Brazil in 2023!
8. The character of Sonic the Hedgehog was launched.

Sonic the Hedgehog was a character created for video games by Sega to compete with Nintendo's popular Mario character. He was created following the release of Sega's new system Genesis in 1988.

Sonic first appeared in the "Rad Mobile" arcade game released in October 1990, but his real entrance came in the 1991 game "Sonic the Hedgehog" in 1991. Since then, he has been Sega's mascot. Interestingly, his shoes were modeled after those often worn by Michael Jackson!
9. Sega's last video game console was released.

The Sega Dreamcast home video game console was to be Sega's last. This came at a time when Sega was suffering financially; the Nintendo PlayStation had outstripped the Sega Saturn, the successor to Genesis, and Sega's worth had dropped. The Dreamcast was launched in Japan in 1998, but due to a manufacturing problem not enough consoles had been made and shipped for the launch, resulting in a major potential profit loss.

The Dreamcast was launched in North America on September 9, 1999 (also known as 9.9.1999!). Its lifespan was pitifully short, however; it was discontinued in 2001.
10. Sega became a developer for third parties.

What with the losses sustained from the relative failure of the Dreamcast, and other financial problems, Sega announced that it was both discontinuing Dreamcast, and becoming a software developer for other companies, in 2001. This ended Sega's hardware development. This formed a major shifting point in Sega's history, and seems an apt place to end a quiz on the same subject!

Discontinuing Dreamcast didn't become a money-saver for Sega, however; simply doing so resulted in $689 million in losses! Sega's losses didn't stick around forever--but that's a different quiz!
Source: Author lordprescott

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor kyleisalive before going online.
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