Author Topic: DATA EAST - production from 1987 to 1994  (Read 222 times)

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Offline Caveoftreasures

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DATA EAST - production from 1987 to 1994
« on: September 30, 2012, 12:28:13 PM »
Here are the Data East machines produced from 1987 to 1994 inclusive.
I have excluded most games with only 1 x game made.
I have however, included the Total Recall, Mad and Ritchie Rich 1 x only machines produced titles)

Hopefully I have included all titles.

Data East had a slow start but started to pick up production quite quickly.

1987-01 Laser War

1988-02 Secret Service  
1988-11 Time Machine  
1988-08 Torpedo Alley

1989-09 Monday Night Football
1989-05 Playboy 35th Anniversary

1990-06 Back to the Future  
1990-04 King Kong (9 x only)
1990-04 Phantom of the Opera
1990-01 Robocop
1990-10 The Simpsons  
1990 Total Recall (1 only)

1991-08 Batman
1991-02 Checkpoint  
1991-09 Star Trek 25th Anniversary
1991-06 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
 
1992-05 Hook  
1992-08 Lethal Weapon 3
1992-12 Star Wars
 
1993-02 Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Friends    
1993-06 Jurassic Park
1993-10 Last Action Hero Data  
1993-10 Mad (1 x only)
1993-12 Tales from the Crypt
 
1994-07 Guns N' Roses
1994-10 Maverick
1994-07 Richie Rich  
1994-01 The Who's Tommy Pinball Wizard
1994-05 WWF Royal Rumble

Interesting to Note -

1.
WWF Wrestling was the last title made by Data East and interestingly, it was a widebody machine as well, the only widebody made by them !
2.
Maverick was designed and produced by Data East, but was branded and released under the Sega brandname during its Data East production.
After Sega purchased Data East, production continued on after Data East closed on paper, and Sega continued production of the Mavewrick title.
Also, in keeping with the widebody theme that WWF Wrestling had started, the first proto-type of Maverick was a widebody, but the final model was decided to be the standard cabinet size, incorporating the Sega Extra-large 192x64 pixel dot matrix display for the first time, which Sega went on to use quite alot over the next few years.

Data East produced alot of great games and were known for quality machines with excellent designs which to this day are relatively easy to maintain compared to the Bally/Williams brand. Data East games are very collectable and are known for their reliability. I believe Data East produced some amazing games and alot of people have Data East games in their coilections. Data East titles are also very affordable and have become popular because of this.

I hope this list enables people to remember and identify the Data East machines a little easier.  ^^^



« Last Edit: September 30, 2012, 01:06:03 PM by Caveoftreasures »
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