|
- SG-1000 - Wikipedia
Developed in response to a downturn in arcades starting in 1982, the SG-1000 was created on the advice of Hayao Nakayama, president of Sega's Japanese arm, and was released on July 15, 1983, the same day that Nintendo released the Family Computer in Japan It also had a limited release in Australia and New Zealand
- SG-1000 II - Sega Retro
The SG-1000 II is an updated model of the SG-1000 video game console released by Sega in 1984 It is internally identical to the original SG-1000, but sports a new outer design
- The Sega SG1000-II System Review - Nostalgia Nerd
The Sega SG-1000 and SG-1000 Mk II were released in Japan around the same time as the Famicom (Nintendo NES) and were the predecessor to the infamous Sega Master System
- Sega SG-1000 (Mark I \ Mark II) - Video Game Console Library
History, technical specs, model chart, pictures and indepth review of the Sega SG-1000 (Mark I \ Mark II) video game console
- Master System Model Differences - ConsoleMods Wiki
For the Japanese market in late 1987, Sega replaced the Mark III with a revised version of the international Master System with extra hardware features It very closely resembles its international counterpart, but does have some crucial differences
- Retrobug. org - Your home for retro computing
The Sega SG-1000 II, or the Sega SG-1000 Mark II was released in 1984 and replaces the Sega SG-1000 which was discontinued at the release of the upgraded machine
- Sega SG-1000 Mark II Console - Consolevariations
One of the most weird games for the Dreamcast Seaman! But it looks awesome! - Console released in Japan - Here is one cool blue Game Gear! with bag! - Console released in North America - Blue colored console - Happy Holidays! Back in 1996 this time, Here is a White Saturn Christmas Nights bundle which was only available around
- SG-1000 II « SEGADriven
A hardware revision of the SG-1000, the SG-1000 II was launched on the 31st of July 1984 after the discontinuation of the SG-1000 This console was the result of a management buyout of the SEGA division at Gulf and Western
|
|
|