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Sega Enterprises

Sega Games Co., Ltd.
Native name
株式会社セガゲームス
Romanized name
Kabushikigaisha Sega gēmusu
Kabushiki gaisha
Subsidiary
Industry Video games
Founded June 3, 1960; 57 years ago (June 3, 1960) (as Nihon Goraku Bussan)
Founders
  • Martin Bromley
  • Irving Bromberg
  • Richard Stewart
Headquarters 1-39-9 Higashi-Shinagawa, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Haruki Satomi
  • (Chairman and CEO)
  • John Cheng
  • (COO, Sega of America)
  • Chris Bergstresser
  • (COO, Sega Europe)
Products
Number of employees
≈4,865 (FY 2014)
Parent Sega Holdings
Divisions
Subsidiaries
Website

Sega Games Co., Ltd. (Japanese: 株式会社セガゲームス, Hepburn: Kabushiki gaisha Sega gēmusu), originally short for Service Games and officially styled as SEGA, is a Japanese multinational video game developer and publisher headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, with offices around the world. Sega developed and manufactured numerous home video game consoles from 1983 to 2001, but after financial losses incurred from its Dreamcast console, the company restructured to focus on providing software as a third-party developer. Sega remains the world's most prolific arcade producer, with over 500 games in over 70 franchises on more than 20 different arcade system boards since 1981.

Sega is known for its multi-million selling game franchises, such as Sonic the Hedgehog, Virtua Fighter, Phantasy Star, Yakuza, and Total War. Sega's North American division, Sega of America, is headquartered in Irvine, California, having moved from San Francisco in 2015. Sega's European division, Sega Europe, is headquartered in London.

In 1940, American businessmen Martin Bromley, Irving Bromberg, and James Humpert formed a company called Standard Games in Honolulu, Hawaii, to provide coin-operated amusement machines to military bases. They saw that the onset of World War II, and the consequent increase in the number of military personnel, would mean there would be demand for something for those stationed at military bases to do in their leisure time. After the war, the founders sold that company and established a new distributor called Service Games, named for the military focus. In 1951, the government of the United States outlawed slot machines in US territories, so Bromley sent two of his employees, Richard Stewart and Ray LeMaire, to Tokyo, Japan, in 1952 to establish a new distributor. The company provided coin-operated slot machines to U.S. bases in Japan and changed its name again to Service Games of Japan by 1953.


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