Difference between revisions 1370603 and 1370636 on enwiki

[[ja:メガCD]]
The '''Sega Mega-CD''' is an addon device for the [[Sega Megadrive]] released in [[Europe]] and [[Japan]]. (The [[North America|North American]] version is the [[Sega CD]]).

The device will allow the user to both play audio CDs and specially designed game CDs.  It also has [[CD plus G|CD+G]] capabilities. 

The development of the Sega CD was top secret; game programmers didn't know what they were designing for until the Sega CD was finally revealed at Tokyo Toy Show in Japan.  The Sega Mega-CD/Sega CD was desgned to be in competition with the [[Turbografx-16]], which had a CD module. The Sega Mega-CD was not meant to compete with the [[Super Famicom]], which was released in in Japan, nor did it compete with [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] in Europe.

The Sega Mega-CD was first released in Japan in 1991 for ¥49,800.  Initially, it was a great success because of the inherent advantages of CDs (high storage space and low media cost) and the fact that it had a nice RPG base. The system sold 100,000 units during the first year of release in Japan. Cost issues prevented more units from being sold. Sega of Japan did not inform their North American division of their Mega-CD console until a few months later. [[NEC]] did horribly with their [[PC Engine CD]] in [[Japan]] and the [[Turbo Duo]] in [[Europe]].

At first, the Mega-CD was a CD tray unit that sat under the console. The Sega Mega-CD 2 was a smaller, cheaper top loading unit that sat next to the Sega Megadrive.

Europe had their Mega-CD expensively priced. It was released in Spring 1993 for £270. Only 4% of European Megadrive owners ended up having a Mega-CD because of its cost. The [[Megadrive]] was a very successful console in Europe. 60,000 of the 70,000 Mega-CD's shipped to Europe were sold by August 1993. Some European countries wouldn't get the Mega-CD until its redesign, which also slowed sales.

The [[Australia|Australians]] got their Mega-CD on April 19, 1993.

The Sega Mega-CD exists in the following models:
*Sega Mega-CD I (Sega CD I in North America)
*Sega Mega-CD II (Sega CD II in North America) had a faster CD-ROM drive
*JVC Wondermega (Xeye in North American release, never released in Europe), was a all-in one Sega CD unit
(contracted; show full)* 8X internal over-sampling digital filter
Audio:
* Frequency Range: 20Hz - 20 KHz
* Signal-to-Noise Ratio: >900dB @ 1K
* Channel Separation: >900 dB
Output: RCA Pin Jack x2 (L/R)
Dimensions: 301mm x 212.5 x 112.5
Weight: 3.1 lbs