Virtua Cop is a 1994 light gun shooter game developed by Sega AM2 and designed by Yu Suzuki. It was originally an arcade game on the Sega Model 2 system, and was ported to the Sega Saturn in 1995 and Windows in 1996.
Virtua Cop 2 is a light gun shooter arcade game, released in 1995 and developed internally at Sega by their AM2 studio. It was ported to the Sega Saturn in 1996. It was released on PC in 1997 and Sega Dreamcast in 2000. It was later bundled with Virtua Cop in Virtua Cop: Elite Edition for PlayStation 2 in 2002.
Virtua Fighter 2 is a 1994 fighting video game developed by Sega. It is the sequel to 1993's Virtua Fighter and the second game in the Virtua Fighter series. It was created by Sega's Yu Suzuki-headed AM2 and was released for the arcades in 1994.
Virtua Fighter 2 is a 1994 fighting video game developed by Sega. It is the sequel to 1993's Virtua Fighter and the second game in the Virtua Fighter series. It was created by Sega's Yu Suzuki-headed AM2 and was released for the arcades in 1994.
Virtual Hydlide is an action role-playing game for the Sega Saturn console, developed by T&E Soft, published by Sega in Europe and Japan, and Atlus Software in North America.
Werewolf: The Apocalypse was a video game that was in development at Capcom's Western development studio around 1995-1996, with plans to release the game on the original Sony PlayStation and the SEGA Saturn. Based on the world of White Wolf's roleplaying game Werewolf: The Apocalypse, WTA was a 3D brawler with an overhead isometric-style perspective. Players could choose one of seven characters, including characters from the tabletop game like Mari Cabrah, and do battle with typical Werewolf foes like Fomori, Black Spiral Dancers and Banes. The game was never finished, and only an early and very rough prototype has ever been seen publicly.
Winter Heat is a sports video game developed by Sega AM3 and published by Sega for arcades in 1997, and for the Sega Saturn in 1998, featuring the license for the 1998 Winter Olympics that were celebrated in Nagano, Japan. It is the sequel to the 1996 Sega game DecAthlete.