Category: SG-1000

Safari Hunting

Fun with a tranquilizer gun If Congo Bongo’s half-baked monkey-chase made it SG-1000’s Donkey Kong analog, then Safari Hunting—a game about tramping through the bush to capture wildlife…

Star Jacker

A front-loaded shooter. Japan’s gaming fandom loved Namco’s Xevious, and the SG-1000 couldn’t escape its influence. In fact, the decidedly Xevious-esque Star Jacker didn’t just ship alongside the console; it even appeared…

Yamato

An unsinkable start. One of a surprising number of early SG-1000 releases to center on a martial theme, Yamato returns once again to the well-worn topic of military warfare but…

Tsumeshogi

Even better than Chessmaster. Right alongside Mahjong, the SG-1000 delivered what would eventually become one of the other inevitabilities of a console launch in Japan: A shogi game. As with Sega’s Mahjong, Serizawa…

N-Sub

Your space in the ocean, invaded. The earliest titles in Sega’s SG-1000 lineup skew heavily toward military realism and violent themes, setting the console apart from the cartoonish…

Congo Bongo

Not Kong, not great. By all reasonable standards, Sega’s home adaptation of minor arcade hit Congo Bongo should have been the breakout title for SG-1000’s launch—the game that sold the…

SG-1000

The first Sega console When Japan’s video games industry officially recounts its own history, the story most often begins at one of two points: Either the 1978 debut…

SC-3000

The SG-1000, but in computer form. Although the SG-1000 is said to have emerged from Sega’s plan to produce a home computer, my work hasn’t gone into any…