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Former PlayStation boss Shawn Layden has said he believes Microsoft is at a "fork in the road" and is questioning whether the ...
Ex-PlayStation boss Shawn Layden thinks current Xbox hardware isn't 'persuasive' enough to win over gamers and resurrect the ...
Former PlayStation boss Shawn Layden has been reminded of the Dreamcast when watching what Xbox has been up to lately.
The Dreamcast was released after the Nintendo 64, so it's not quite as impressive a feat as Girgis' other projects, like getting GTA 3 to run on the console, but it's still undeniably a fun port. Plus ...
Jan. 31 -- It’s game over for the Sega Dreamcast. The struggling Japanese game maker said today it would stop production of its much-hyped console and focus on making games for what had been ...
The Dreamcast died and, perversely, in doing so it may have sealed its reputation as one of the greatest consoles ever. Nothing builds a cult like a tragic demise, especially when so much ...
The Sega Dreamcast is the forgotten orphan of the console wars, an extremely capable machine never able to escape the shadow of its PlayStation rivals and because it marked the end of Sega’s … ...
As it happened, the Dreamcast did moderately well in the short time it was active, but talk of the impending PlayStation 2 release meant many gamers didn't bite and only 11m systems were sold ...
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.
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 ...
The Dreamcast was a great system, and there’s an argument to be made that the only reason it wasn’t more popular was that it was just slightly too far ahead of its time.
Dreamcast helped raise Sega's share to about 5.5 percent as of last fall, according to research group NPD. At that time, Sony controlled about 56 percent of the market and Nintendo about 38.5 percent.