- Bank Panic
- The Black Onyx
- Bomb Jack
- Borderline
- C_So!
- The Castle
- Chack'n Pop
- Champion Base Ball
- Champion Billards
- Champion Boxing
- Champion Golf
- Champion Ice Hockey
- Champion Kendou
- Champion Pro Wrestling
- Champion Soccer
- Champion Tennis
- Championship Lode Runner
- Choplifter
- Congo Bongo
- Doki Doki Penguin Land
- Dragon Wang
- Drol
- Elevator Action
- Exerion
- Flicky
- Girl's Garden
- Golgo 13
- GP World
- Gulkave
- Guzzler
- H.E.R.O.
- Hang-On II
- Home Mahjong
- Hustle Chumy
- Hyper Sports
- 007 James Bond
- Lode Runner
- Sega Mahjong
- Monaco GP
- Ninja Princess
- N-Sub
- Orguss
- Pacar
- Pachinko
- Pachinko II
- Pitfall II - The Lost Caverns
- Pop Flamer
- Q*bert
- Rock n' Bolt
- Safari Hunting
- Safari Race
- Sega Flipper
- Sega Galaga
- Serizawa Hachidan no Tsumeshogi
- Shinnyuushain Tooru-kun
- Sindbad Mystery
- Soukoban
- Space Invaders
- Space Mountain
- Space Slalom
- Star Force
- Star Jacker
- Super Tank
- Wonder Boy
- Yamato
- Zaxxon
- Zippy Race
- Zoom 909
The SG-1000 is a home video game console manufactured by Sega and released in Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and other regions. It was Sega's first entry into the home video game hardware business. Introduced in 1983, the SG-1000 was released on the same day that Nintendo released the Family Computer in Japan. The SG-1000 was released in several forms, including the SC-3000 computer and the redesigned SG-1000 II released in 1984. A third iteration of the console, the Sega Mark III, was released in 1985. It provided a custom video display processor over previous iterations and served as the basis for the Master System in 1986, Sega's first internationally released console.
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