Sega Sells Classic Genesis ROMs On Japanese Site 30
Thanks to 1UP for its story revealing that Sega is opening a Japanese ROM download service for classic Genesis games, meaning that "players can download and play an array of 16-bit games on their PCs" completely legally. According to the piece, "The service charges a monthly fee of 1,000 yen (about $9) for unlimited downloads. 30 games will be available at launch, with about 10 new games joining them each month." Launch titles include Gunstar Heroes, Ecco the Dolphin, Phantasy Star II, and Sonic the Hedgehog 2, and "Sega plans to eventually build a library of more than 100 games, as well as community features where retro-gaming enthusiasts can meet and chat", but there's no news on a similar service in the West, and it's a little unclear whether you can keep the games after stopping monthly payments.
I liked this the first time... (Score:2)
Shame the site was brought down...
SITE IS STAYING UP (Score:2)
neat (Score:1)
Amazing! (Score:4, Interesting)
A few questions: How are the ROMs to be played - do you have to download them each time you want to play and run them through an online emulator, or has Sega made their own emulator software? On a similar note, how does saving work - will it allow things like multiple save files and other such benefits that emulators typically offer? Are there any plans to release games from the less-popular Genesis add-ons (32x, Sega CD)? None of those are really deal-breakers, but they would certainly sweeten the deal.
Re:Amazing! (Score:1)
Re:Amazing! (Score:2)
Re:Amazing! (Score:2)
Now, let's take it a step further.
I'd love to see a service where we could buy old CD-ROM games - mainly Console games. How about a service that holds the ISO images online, and you can buy a physical copy of the media for $20 apiece? If Sega came out with their own Sega-CD emulator and Saturn emulator for OS X/Windows (and yes, Linux - and please, no discussions on the capabilities of those emulators, we know
Re:Amazing! (Score:2)
dunno about that.. if sega helped i'm pretty sure they could get something running in a month. check satourne [consollection.com] for emulator in progress(and yes, for the lazy who don't want to check, there's screenshots).
psx games aren't that hard to come by on the net either(and the emulators are pretty sweet). so it's just a
Interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
They never said they'd stop at 100.
If other companies *cough*Nintendo*cough* catch onto this, will we see the end of "remade" games such as "Namco Museum".
Rental (Score:4, Interesting)
http://sega.jp/product/home.html
it's a rental service, so you presumably have to pay the monthly fee to keep playing the games you've downloaded. (I could be wrong, but I'm not sure what else "rental" could mean.)
They're launching the service next Thursday, so I guess we'll see.
DRM (Score:1)
Because people choose their products by... (Score:1)
Re:DRM (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:DRM (Score:2)
The main problem with this idea is that owners of copyrighted material have a natural monopoly over that material. Nobody else can *offer* that material but them, so there is no competition. You can get Phantasy Star from but one company.
T
Re:DRM (Score:1, Interesting)
Emulator? (Score:2)
Myself, I find Gens [consoleemul.com] to be the best (and it's open source, too). Makes me glad I hung on to all my old Sega CD games after mine up and died.
And lastly, what's a post without some piracy links? Over at www.suprnova.org [suprnova.org] there are torrents containing every Genesis game ever released in the US. Same for NES, SNES, and more.
The NES package of 700+ US titles is only 70 MB. Heh. Technology.
Re:Emulator? (Score:1)
Not only open source, but open source with a linux port in the works. Last I checked the linux port is still beta, but I've found it to work very well with a few sega cd games (once ripped to iso). Genny emus weren't all that user friendly before this, even aside from lack of support for sega cd. So I was very happy to hear of this port!
Re:Emulator? (Score:1)
Sorry about that. I noticed my error in not specifying the platform of linux only after submitting. The compatibility there was allways pretty good, but the user interfaces were either pretty lacking, or if good - the emulator itself would lack features. I can't recall which it was, but I remember one that actually had a nice GUI and configuration options - only to discover it didn't even have a full screen mode. Compared to that, gens entrance into linux seems like a breakthrough
Why online by subscription? (Score:2)
Re:Why online by subscription? (Score:1)
What? (Score:1)