Sega is considering launching a Netflix-like subscription service, which, if successful, could be a game changer in the long run. In a recent interview with The Guardian, Shuji Utsumi, the CEO of ...
Sega’s RGG Studio announced at TGS 2024 that it has two other big projects in the works. First off, RGG Studio will be delivering the first full Virtua Fighter game in over ten years. In addition, the ...
Sega is looking into the possibility of launching a subscription service for video games. In an interview with the BBC, Sega president Shuji Utsumi said the Sonic maker is weighing up its own ...
The move makes sense from a business perspective. With the likes of Xbox Game Pass and PlayStation Plus already dominating the market, Sega is likely realizing that its best shot at competing is ...
This might also mean we will see Sega no longer providing its games to services like Xbox Game Pass or PlayStation Plus. Regardless, it looks like Sega is only discussing the idea right now ...
TL;DR: SEGA's new president, Shuji Utsumi, aims to revitalize the brand by adopting a more aggressive strategy reminiscent of its 1990s and early 2000s heyday. Plans include reviving classic games ...
See our ethics statement. If Lockheed Martin made a Game Boy, would you buy one? In the 1990s, I was among the kids who thought military aircraft were devastatingly cool. By then, Tom Cruise and ...
Between Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation Plus ... and multiple other companies and you have a veritable free-for-all. Now, Sega’s new president, Shuji Utsumi, says the beloved company is considering ...
Sega CEO Shuji Utsumi says the company has no plans to release more mini consoles. The Japanese video game company released two mini versions of its acclaimed Sega Mega Drive 16-bit console ...
Sega is toying with the idea of using its own massive franchises - like Persona and Sonic The Hedgehog - to fuel a video game subscription service. Netflix-style subscriptions have sprouted out ...
But when it came time to pick one of his favorite video game characters of all time, Schwartz didn't go with Sega's blue hedgehog. Instead, he choose a supporting character from Square Enix's 1995 ...