The two guys boast throughout the commercial, with the Coleco guy countering everything the Mattel guy says. “It was a wonderful ad, two guys dressed up as football players, one as Coleco Electronic Quarterback and one as Mattel Football. “In my first week at Coleco I was asked to approve an ad for a game that was a direct competitor against Mattel’s Football,” he explains. This was just the way he’d always done things.
#Classic sega games tv#
Katz immediately challenged the polite business practices of his bosses at Sega of Japan by funding a TV and print advertising campaign that set out to belittle Nintendo and its quaint, family-orientated consoles. To take things up a step, Rosen brought in Michael Katz as CEO, a combative exec with years of experience at blue-chip companies such as Colgate and Proctor & Gamble, as well as a stint at early console manufacturer Coleco.
So he rebranded it Genesis – a name he thought was cool and symbolised Sega’s rebirth – and then he started building.Īt that time, Sega of America was basically a trading outpost 30 staff in a small office, handling distribution and modest marketing budgets. All he had to do was get US gamers to recognise it. The first games machine with a 16-bit processor, and boasting beautiful, colourful visuals, excellent sound and enough power to handle accurate arcade conversions, it had all the credentials of a hit. The Mega Drive did OK in Japan but it was small fry – a cult machine.īut David Rosen, who co-founded Sega after serving with the US air force in Japan during the Korean war, was determined to make a real event of the console’s launch in his native country. Nintendo utterly dominated the games business at that time, with a 95% share of the console sector and most of the biggest Japanese developers locked into exclusive deals to make games for its NES and forthcoming SNES consoles. The machine was launched in Japan the year before under a different name – the Mega Drive – and with a couple of decent arcade conversions, Space Harrier II and Super Thunder Blade, but not much in the way of fanfare.
The US launch of the Sega Genesis, on 14 August 1989, probably didn’t seem like a huge deal outside the video game industry.