Sega Sports R&D


Sega Sports R&D was a Japanese video game development division of Sega. The studio was responsible for creating and producing the Let's Make a, 90 Minutes, Sega Worldwide Soccer, Virtua Pro Football, and Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games series. In 2016, the division was merged with CS1 R&D and ceased to exist.

History

AM6 (1994–1998)

Initially founded in mid-1994 as part of Consumer Software R&D Dept. 1, Team Andromeda became a separate internal development team when the first Sega Saturn software was entering development. The name came from Andromeda, the code used to make their games. The group produced three Panzer Dragoon titles and, after the release of its final game Panzer Dragoon Saga in 1998, was then dissolved. Different teams of the same division were responsible for the Let's Make a series, the Sega Worldwide Soccer series, and the World Series Baseball series.
After the restructuring, many of the group's members joined Sega's Smilebit and United Game Artists development teams. Former Team Andromeda staff have also developed video games at other studios, including Polyphony Digital, Artoon, feelplus and Land Ho!

Smilebit (1998–2004)

Key members of Team Andromeda were folded into the new second-party Sega studio Smilebit Corp., which crafted such titles as Jet Set Radio, Panzer Dragoon Orta and GunValkyrie. On July 1, 2004, Sega's subsidiaries, Wow Entertainment, Amusement Vision, Hitmaker, Smilebit, Sega Rosso, and United Game Artists reintegrated into Sega following the merge between Sega and Sammy in 2005, and a holding company,, was formed. The subsidiaries ceased to exist and were renamed.

Sega Sports Japan (2004–present)

The division was from now on was only for sports titles, adding the Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games series. The department responsible for non-sport titles, became part of Amusement Vision under the lead of Toshihiro Nagoshi.

Games developed

as AM6
as Smilebit
as Sega Sports Japan