1983

July 1983SG-1000
SC-3000
N-Sub
Mahjong
Serizawa Hachidan no Tsumeshogi
Congo Bongo
Yamato
Star Jacker
Aug. 1983Safari Hunting
Champion Tennis
Oct. 1983Champion Baseball
Sega Flipper
Othello Multivision
Othello [Multivision]
Guzzler
Q*bert
Nov. 1983Pop Flamer
Pacar
Sega-Galaga
Dec. 1983Monaco GP
Space Slalom
Pachinko

1984

Jan. 1984Borderline
March 1984Champion Golf
Zippy Race
Sindbad Mystery
Exerion
Pachinko II
Golgo 13
May 1984Orguss
Space Mountain
Sannin Mahjong
June 1984Challenge Derby
July 1984SG-1000 II
Okamoto Ayako no Match Play Golf
Safari Race
Sept. 1984Lode Runner
Oct. 1984Champion Boxing
Champion Soccer
Hustle Chumy
Dec. 1984Space Armor
James Bond 007
Home Mahjong
Flicky

1985

Jan. 1985Girl’s Garden
Feb. 1985Zaxxon
March 1985Champion Pro Wrestling
April 1985GP World
Konami no Shinnyuushain Tooru-kun
Konami no Hyper Sports
May 1985Star Force
June 1985Space Invaders
July 1985Card Catcher
Dragon Wang
Zoom 909
Choplifter
Pitfall II
Doki Doki Penguin Land
Othello [Sega]
Sept. 1985Chack’n Pop
Bank Panic
Oct. 1985Mark III
Drol
Nov. 1985Elevator Action
Rock n’ Bolt
Dec. 1985Soukoban
Hang On II
Championship Lode Runner
H.E.R.O.
Champion Ice Hockey
Bomb Jack
UnknownGraphics Board with Terebi Oekaki

1986

Feb. 1986C-SO!
Ninja Princess
April 1986Champion Kendou
June 1986Super Tank*
July 1986Gulkave*
Sept. 1986Wonder Boy*
Oct. 1986Champion Billiards*
Nov. 1986The Castle**

1987

Feb. 1987Loretta no Shouzou: Sherlock Holmes
March 1987The Black Onyx

*Estimated based on MicomBASIC coverage

**Estimated based on Weekly Famitsu coverage


A note on the chronology:

Piecing together a chronology for Sega’s SG-1000 line took some doing. The timeline you see here represents the best and most detailed sequence of software releases available for the console. Sega’s own public and internal record-keeping only tracks precise release dates for two games from the entire platform: Star Jacker (July 15, 1983) and Loretta no Shouzou (Feb. 1987). Beyond these bookends, the only firm release information available online for SG-1000 came from a variety of contemporary Japanese publications, most notably a collection of Game Machine magazines scanned by Gaming Alexandria.

A biweekly trade publication focused on the Japanese arcade industry, two issues of Game Machine (July 15, 1985 and May 1, 1986) featured retail release date lists for all current consoles in the Japanese home market: SG-1000, Othello Multivision, Famicom, and Super Cassette Vision. Those lists, which are complete for SG-1000 through Champion Kendou, directly contradict some of Sega’s own listings (which simply provide years for SG-1000 game releases, rather than breaking them down by month), but Game Machine’s data lines up more accurately with first-person accounts from Sega devs; for example, Sega cites Girl’s Garden as a 1984 release, but Yuji Naka has stated that it shipped in Jan. 1985—the same date given in Game Machine. My Segaiden video series used Sega’s dates and presented the library largely in catalog order, but the sequence presented in this book appears more accurate.

Special thanks: Gaming Alexandria, Kevin Bunch, and Tweakbod