VGEsoterica
Member
Sure Sega technically had a 3D game in the 80's, but good luck remembering the name of that game! (it was Sub Roc 3D and technically its still 2D....fun little fact)
But Virtua Racing was the definitive line in the sand for Sega going from a developer of purely 2D video games to embracing 3D and being the market leader of the technology. Because throughout the 90s barely anyone could touch Sega when it came to 3D video game development OR the hardware the games ran on. Model 1, 2 and 3 just absolutely blew anything else available out of the water save for some of Namco's 3D platforms...and even then Sega always still had the edge.
But for a first outing in proper 3D, Virtua Racing is still a game that is highly regarded as an absolute classic. Somehow Sega managed to avoid the "3D growing pains" devs usually found when transitioning from 2D sprite based game development to the triangle era of polygons and 3D engines. It doesn't hurt that the racing is just straight up iconic!
But that got me thinking GAF...what devs nailed 3D out of the gate and what devs just totally tripped?
But Virtua Racing was the definitive line in the sand for Sega going from a developer of purely 2D video games to embracing 3D and being the market leader of the technology. Because throughout the 90s barely anyone could touch Sega when it came to 3D video game development OR the hardware the games ran on. Model 1, 2 and 3 just absolutely blew anything else available out of the water save for some of Namco's 3D platforms...and even then Sega always still had the edge.
But for a first outing in proper 3D, Virtua Racing is still a game that is highly regarded as an absolute classic. Somehow Sega managed to avoid the "3D growing pains" devs usually found when transitioning from 2D sprite based game development to the triangle era of polygons and 3D engines. It doesn't hurt that the racing is just straight up iconic!
But that got me thinking GAF...what devs nailed 3D out of the gate and what devs just totally tripped?