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The rise and fall of the Dreamcast

ITANI | April 13, 2007 | News | Dreamcast 
With Sega having officially ceased production of Dreamcast discs (GD-ROMs) and the repair service set to close on September 28, the Dreamcast has well and truly been laid to rest. If it breaks after September 28, you're on your own. Or stuck in the world of emulation.

Although the Dreamcast died before its time, having been discontinued in 2001 - just three years after its original 1998 release(1999 in US and UK), its many innovations, vast selection of peripherals and huge library of arcade games earned it a huge cult following. Some say that the console was launched too soon.

The Dreamcast was considered way ahead of its time when it hit Japanese stores on November 27, 1998, with high-resolution, silky smooth visuals that put N64 and PSone to shame.

Innovative genius

The biggest innovation Dreamcast introduced was the Visual Memory Unit (or VMU), with its little LCD screen that could be slotted into the controller for an in-hand display.

The possibilities for innovative gameplay using the VMU were vast, and Sega was the first to demonstrate with Sonic Adventure, which allowed you to transfer in-game virtual pets (dubbed Chaos) to the VMU where they became a virtual pet you could look after. Although, except for the odd radar in some action games the VMU was seldom used as Sega probably intended.

Dreamcast was also the first console to come internet ready out of the box, with a built-in modem tucked in its side. Awesome puzzle game, Chu Chu Rocket from Sega, kicked off the online console revolution, followed by stunning conversions of Quake III Arena and Unreal Tournament, which worked with a proprietary Dreamcast mouse and keyboard giving console gamers a taste of first-person shooting that had previously been exclusive to PC junkies. More than that though, Dreamcast was the first console to offer cross-platform play. PC gamers got to show off their headshots against DC n00bs with Quake III Arena.

Peripherals played a huge role in Dreamcast's short lifespan. The now-legendary rhythm-action game, Samba de Amigo, had players shaking a set of (rare and expensive thesedays) maracas in different directions to on-screen prompts and funky tunes.

The Dreamcast light gun brought arcade shooting home, most notably compatible with the awesome House of the Dead II, on which we had burned many a quid before it came to Sega's next-gen console.

The official Dreamcast Arcade Stick is still considered to be one of the single best home arcade sticks ever made, and with games like Street Fighter 3 and Marvel vs. Capcom 2, Dreamcast had the hardcore 2D fighters to support it.

Sega Bass fishing came with a neat fishing rod controller that was actually sensitive to movements (hello Nintendo Wii). Dreamcast even has voice-controlled gaming, with a microphone that slotted into the top of your controller which allowed you to control the strange but cool virtual pet game, Seamen, with your voice. And there aren't many consoles that can claim that.

The beginning was the end

Despite the Dreamcast's undisputed awesomeness, sales took a turn for the worst after Sony crashed the party with the PS2 and its superior marketing campaigns. While Sony was wowing the kids, Sega went and spunked a hell of a lot of money sponsoring Arsenal football club. The inevitable was fast approaching.

Sega pulled the plug on Dreamcast in 2001, announcing on the 31 January that production of the console would cease in March that year and the company would dedicate recourses to software development.

"One of the best consoles ever, destroyed because of the lies and marketing hype of the PS2," said CVG reader, neilyboy1, who shares the sentiments of many hardcore Dreamcast fans that were, and still are, bitterly upset that Dreamcast was embarrassingly knocked out of the console war.

But before giving up the ghost of Dreamcast though, Sega struck a deal with TV manufacturer Pace to include the DC's PowerVR Series2 technology in set-top-boxes. But this move failed to keep the Dream(cast) alive and it died on its arse.

Although most of the games in development still made it to shelves before the Dreamcast was buried, there were a few games and hardware projects that never saw the light of day, as with any console.

Yu Suzuki, creator of the amazing Shenmue games, had promised several episodes to the series, but only two made it, with the second game being rushed out with Japanese speech. Shenmue 2 was later ported to Xbox with full English speech, the way it should have been.

Many of its planned sequels ended up on Xbox after Sega and Microsoft struck an exclusivity deal. Sega was hardly going to give Sony (the company that almost killed it) its hard worked-on games so soon after the DC's demise. These included Gunvalkyrie, Panza Dragoon Next (renamed Panza Dragoon Orta) and Toe Jam & Earl 3.

A Dreamcast port of Half Life was almost released, with review versions even being sent out to the press. The game was eventually canned because of horrendous loading times. We remember hearing stories about how you could go and make a cup of tea, come back and it still wouldn't have loaded the next level. Official Dreamcast Magazine even carried the game as a cover review, if we remember correctly. Half-Life and Propeller Arena: Aviation Battle Championship were later leaked to the internet, which delighted gamers were able to download and play.

Agartha, Castlevania Resurrection and Geist Force were canned and buried, never to return, as was the DVD-playing attachment, high-capacity MP3-playing VMUs and a Zip drive, all of which Sega showed at E3 in 2000. If Sega had the capital to see all this through, today's console battle could be a very different war.
10 DC titles you MUST own

Dreamcast had a cracking library of games but there was the striking omission of anything EA Sports related, which Sony probably paid an arm and a leg for to keep from the platform. And the fact that EA Sports didn't support the platform... well, we know what happened next.

Soul Calibur

Shenmue

Ikaruga

Samba De Amigo

Jet Set Radio

Crazi Taxi

Metropolis Street Racer

Phantasy Star Online

Quake III Arena

Virtua Tennis

Live After Death

If you still love your Dreamcast (and it still works) and you can't bear the thought of it passing on, there's still hope. If you haven't got a Dreamcast, or don't know what we're talking about, jump on eBay now and you should be able to get yourself a console and a nice bundle of games for around £30, which is literally an absolute bargain. It's also worth checking out those cash converter-type places where crackheads sell everything they get their hands on for a fix. You can usually find some old gaming gems at the bottom of the pile, or behind a glass window. Do it now, before they become rarer. Or worse, eBay runs out of them.
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  • 0 thumbs!
    Gary15 | April 13, 2007
    The death of the dreamcast was a real shame, I think it had some great games and deserved to sell more units.
  • 0 thumbs!
    madtown | April 13, 2007
    Good ol' Dreamcast gotta love the Arcade Stick and that funky arcade unit.

    Never new they were going to have a port of Half-Life, very interesting.
  • 0 thumbs!
    Qoolflame | April 13, 2007
    R.I.P Dreamcast. May you return and own everything in the next life.
  • 0 thumbs!
    serpent | April 13, 2007
    Yea it was a good system..but it was released at a wrong time.

    R.I.P Dreamcast.
  • 0 thumbs!
    Kokoro | April 13, 2007
    Didn't the Dreamcast return for a little while?
  • 0 thumbs!
    Wolfwood | April 13, 2007
    I didn't put as much time into my Dreamcast as the more dedicated fans would've liked, but thinking about does take me back. I think my very first post at Neoseeker was in the DC boards, so in a sense it was one of the first consoles that I bothered talking about on the Internet.
  • 0 thumbs!
    Requiem | April 13, 2007
    The Dreamcast game 'Phantasy Star Online', and the general online play, was how a lot of people (myself included) first came to Game Grep's mother site, Neoseeker. I guess you could say the console has a lot to answer for ;p

    I think Sega greatly failed to get a decent advertising campaign going for the Dreamcast (certainly in the UK, anyway). I don't remember seeing any adverts for showcase games like 'Shenmue', 'Skies of Arcadia', 'Phantasy Star Online', 'Resident Evil: Code Veronica', etc.

    I would still power my Dreamcast up from time to time, but it no longer works, unfortunately.
  • 0 thumbs!
    NyffTotal90 | April 13, 2007
    Sure was a great console. R.I.P to it I guess.
  • 0 thumbs!
    ITANI | April 14, 2007
    My favourite series on the Dreamcast is Shenmue. One of the best Action RPG games I've ever played. There is also Sonic Adventure which I thought was much better than the second one that was released, because they took the interaction feature out.
  • 0 thumbs!
    TwilightPrince | April 14, 2007
    Dreamcast had some great games. Crazy Tazi, Jet Grind Radio, RE: Code Veronica, etc.

    Good times, good times.
  • 0 thumbs!
    ITANI | April 14, 2007
    Don't you mean Crazy Taxi & Jet Set Radio? I loved both games also, can't believe I forgot about them.

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