Sega Shows Old Handheld Prototype For The First Time Publicly

Illustration for article titled Sega Shows Old Handheld Prototype For The First Time Publicly
Screenshot: SEGA
Kotaku EastEast is your slice of Asian internet culture, bringing you the latest talking points from Japan, Korea, China and beyond. Tune in every morning from 4am to 8am.

In 1995, Sega released the Genesis Nomad in North America. The 16-bit portable was a handheld console with an LCD screen and able to play Genesis cartridges. In a recent YouTube clip, Sega’s Hiroyuki Miyazaki showed off the hardware’s prototype for the first time.

Advertisement

Here is the Nomad’s final product version. The design is in-tune with the home console, which makes sense as it’s literally a portable Genesis.

Illustration for article titled Sega Shows Old Handheld Prototype For The First Time Publicly
Screenshot: SEGA
Advertisement

The Nomad could also be plugged into TVs for big-screen action, a novelty at that time.

Illustration for article titled Sega Shows Old Handheld Prototype For The First Time Publicly
Screenshot: SEGA

The prototype looked different—and in my opinion, much nicer. Note that the hardware is emblazoned with the name “Venus,” which was the codename.

Illustration for article titled Sega Shows Old Handheld Prototype For The First Time Publicly
Screenshot: SEGA
Advertisement

While Sega hoped to overtake Nintendo’s handheld dominance with the Nomad, the 16-bit portable was ultimately unsuccessful and discontinued by 1999. 

You can read more about Sega’s efforts in the handheld race right here.

Originally from Texas, Ashcraft has called Osaka home since 2001. He has authored six books, including most recently, The Japanese Sake Bible.

Share This Story

Get our newsletter

DISCUSSION

bakamoichigei
Bakamoichigei

Kinda ugly...looks like the bastard child of the Commodore Datasette tape deck. 🤣 But hot damn does it have much better-looking buttons than the final version. 😬