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With its novelty controllers, internet connection and audacious games, the Dreamcast briefly held the spotlight 25 years ago.
The Dreamcast just got a new port of Mario Kart 64, and after a couple months of work, it's here and ready to play.
Engadget started up in 2004, so we missed the rise (and fall) of the Sega Dreamcast by a few years. We've still covered the company's ups and downs over the past decade and a half (and can't wait ...
Ex-PlayStation boss Shawn Layden thinks current Xbox hardware isn't 'persuasive' enough to win over gamers and resurrect the ...
The Dreamcast's 1.2GB discs and the Gamecube's 1.5GB discs couldn't hold a candle to the 4.7GB that could be stored on a PS2 or Xbox DVD, of course. At $199, Dreamcast is launching at the same ...
Without the Dreamcast taking the plunge into the murky depths of online gaming, we wouldn’t have seen the 2000s progress the way that they did, eventually leading to the gaming landscape we see now.
The Dreamcast was released after the Nintendo 64, so it's not quite as impressive a feat as Girgis' other projects, like ...
First released on the Dreamcast before later getting a PlayStation 2 port that itself has not aged well at all, many of the original staff returned to work on Grandia 2’s tale of a world that ...
The Dreamcast was powered by a Hitachi SH-4 processor and a PowerVR2 GPU from NEC. Notably, Sega didn't attempt to craft any custom hardware, like it did with the Saturn.
So yeah, it's looking like Jnmartin84 has firmly set his sights on StarFox 64. This means that once his Mario Kart 64 port finally releases publicly in the coming weeks (or likely days, at the speed ...
The official Dreamcast backend has a great mechanism for caching plugins that allows you to swap the ScummVM disc for a game disc and load games from it. The only way you can do anything like that ...