UPDATE: Roger Craig Smith Pushes Back on “One last job” Rumor.

Smith’s return was “one last job” according to Monkey Ball voice actor.

Continue reading UPDATE: Roger Craig Smith Pushes Back on “One last job” Rumor.
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● Knothole Book Club ● Reread Archie’s Sonic with us! ● Episode 1

Join hosts Nuckles87 and Evil Dr. Reef in this revisiting of gaming’s longest running comic series!

Continue reading ● Knothole Book Club ● Reread Archie’s Sonic with us! ● Episode 1
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★ SegaSonic Radio ★ Ep. 1: Sonic Groove Choons FM

SegaSonic Radio is back, and backer than ever! This time as a weekly music stream! Listen now!

Continue reading ★ SegaSonic Radio ★ Ep. 1: Sonic Groove Choons FM
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Dreams Come True Announces Vocal Green Hill Zone Single

A special treat to drink tea to.

If you caught the Sonic 30th Anniversary Symphony, there was a special announcement during the intermission where Masato Nakamura of Dreams Come True announced a new single of the Green Hill Zone theme. This version will feature lyrics and vocals from Miwa Yoshida. No formats, platforms, or date were announced.

However, you may have already heard a bit of this single already if you caught a Japanese tea commercial last month. The version announced today will most likely be a full version of this commercial’s jingle. So grab a green tea, and keep an ear out for when the full song drops!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3nT10RpkGY

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Minecraft Sonic DLC: It’s Official and Out Now!

For those who don’t like gentle curves.

At the end of June’s Sonic Central presentation, Sega teased Sonic coming to Minecraft. Today, we’ve got our first look and our first details. And our first release– it’s now. The DLC is out now. You can go get it. Or so the trailer says.

While tricky to find exact details without actually owning a copy of Minecraft, the official blog post bills this as an infinite 3D runner featuring loops, springs rings, chao, and badniks across Green Hill, Chemical Plant, Sky Sanctuary, and Tails’ workshop. Players can use skins of Sonic, Tails, Knuckles, Amy, Shadow, and plenty of others.

UPDATE: The pack, available within the Minecraft in-game Marketplace, is priced at $7.99 (USD), or 1340 Minecoins. The pack includes one Minecraft world (as seen in the trailers), and 24 skins including:

Sonic, Tails, Knuckles, Dr. Eggman, Amy Rose, Big, Cream, E-102 Gamma, Shadow, Rouge, E-123 Omega, Chaos, Vector, Charmy, Espio, Mighty, Silver, Blaze, Ray, Infinite, Mecha Sonic (Sonic & Knuckles), Metal Sonic, Metal Knuckles (Sonic R), and Werehog Sonic.

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First Images and Pre-Orders for Sonic The Card Game

Beware the sinister machinations of Metal Sonic and… Cubot.

Continue reading First Images and Pre-Orders for Sonic The Card Game
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Sonic Mania Free on the Epic Games Store Starting June 24

If you don’t already own it on PC. Or Switch. Or PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X…

Continue reading Sonic Mania Free on the Epic Games Store Starting June 24
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Sonic Colors: Ultimate Producer Explains Player Customization and Tails Save

Today, Shacknews posted a video interview with Aaron Roseman, producer of Sonic Colors: Ultimate, revealing a bit about the porting process and revealing several small details that differentiate Ultimate from the original Wii release.

Roseman notes that the Tails Save system does replace the lives system in the game. You still collect Tails Saves in the same way you collect lives, but it places you in your last safe location rather than a the beginning of a stage or mid-stage checkpoint. Another slight aid is the addition of the “Hundred Ring,” a special item that gives the player 100 rings and invincibility.

The interview also highlights the character customization elements new to this version of the game. Through gameplay, players will be able to unlock options for shoes, gloves, effect trails when Sonic boosts, and auras that surround Sonic. “You can adjust the colors in a game called Sonic Colors,” the interviewer notes.

Other details in the interview:

  • The game is standard controller focused. It will not use motion controls.
  • Cutscene videos have been updated for HD and 4K resolutions.
  • The game does not use all the technical features of the Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5, but Roseman states it runs very well on both consoles.
  • This game was primarily developed during Covid quarantine, with staff working from home.
  • Roseman has an impressive NES collection on the shelves behind him. I’m jealous.

Shacknews also secured a full stage playthrough of Tropical Resort Act 3:

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Shemar Moore Joins the Cast of Sonic 2 Movie

Today, Shemar Moore confirmed on twitter that he will be part of Paramount’s Sonic the Hedgehog 2.

Continue reading Shemar Moore Joins the Cast of Sonic 2 Movie
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IDW’s Giving Away Trades, Games, and a Custom PS5

Finally, a PS5 that looks presentable!

Continue reading IDW’s Giving Away Trades, Games, and a Custom PS5
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“Rapid Recap” Brings 12 Seasonal Characters Back to Sonic Forces: Speed Battle

For those of you who didn’t grab Elf Classic Sonic the first time around!

Continue reading “Rapid Recap” Brings 12 Seasonal Characters Back to Sonic Forces: Speed Battle
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Sonic’s Got Pants in SEGA Shop NA’s New Summer Line

Well, not pants. Shorts really. But the sentiment remains: Sonic covers up to go sailboarding.

Continue reading Sonic’s Got Pants in SEGA Shop NA’s New Summer Line
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Shirt Alert! Starlight Roller & Starlight Bomber at The Yetee

Today in Shirt Alert, these charity designs are outta sight!

Continue reading Shirt Alert! Starlight Roller & Starlight Bomber at The Yetee
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Famitsu Interview Says Sonic Colors Ultimate Targeting New and Young Fans

We’ve got a game of Twitter Translation Telephone here, so strap in.

Continue reading Famitsu Interview Says Sonic Colors Ultimate Targeting New and Young Fans
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Sonic Talk Podcast, Episode 76: The Year of Luigi of Sonic

This episode: Sonic on Series S, and Ian Flynn’s 15th Anniversary

Continue reading Sonic Talk Podcast, Episode 76: The Year of Luigi of Sonic
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New Famitsu Scans Clarify Tails as Support Character in Sonic Colors Ultimate

Our fox friend is sidelined but not grounded.

Continue reading New Famitsu Scans Clarify Tails as Support Character in Sonic Colors Ultimate
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Sonic Goes Demonic in Upcoming SMT: Liberation Dx2 Crossover Event

Wouldn’t be the first time Sonic fought gods.

Continue reading Sonic Goes Demonic in Upcoming SMT: Liberation Dx2 Crossover Event
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Shirt Alert! BIG Tricks! at The Yetee

Today in Shirt Alert, skate like it’s 1998. Grind like it’s 1999.

Continue reading Shirt Alert! BIG Tricks! at The Yetee
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“You’re Already Dead” in Sonic x Fist of the North Star Mobile Collaboration

Sonic will experience the post-apocalypse this June in Fist of the North Star LEGENDS ReVIVE.

Continue reading “You’re Already Dead” in Sonic x Fist of the North Star Mobile Collaboration
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We Have Our New Sonic Voice Actor, and It’s… Roger Craig Smith?

In a tweet, Smith confirms he has returned to the role of Sonic after [checks watch] four months from his public departure.

Continue reading We Have Our New Sonic Voice Actor, and It’s… Roger Craig Smith?
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Hit the Gym, “The Emerald Club” Clothing Collection Is Now Available on Zavvi

If you’re looking to 90s up your wardrobe, UK pop culture retailer Zavvi has a new line of Sonic athletic designs.

Continue reading Hit the Gym, “The Emerald Club” Clothing Collection Is Now Available on Zavvi
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Join Us on Twitch for a Sonic Channel Presentation Watch-Along!

Jump on Twitch at 11:45 AM EST on May 27 to watch the presentation with some of our writers!

Continue reading Join Us on Twitch for a Sonic Channel Presentation Watch-Along!
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SEGA Reveals Sonic Announcement Stream for May 27th [Updated Again]

Just prior to Sonic’s anniversary month, the Sonic Twitter account has announced a YouTube and Twitch stream on May 27th promising “upcoming projects, partnerships, and events.”

While “projects” does not inherently mean new game announcements, there are several rumors and leaks from the past month for some form of Sonic game collection, and a remaster or remake of Sonic Colors. We also know of Dark Horse’s Sonic Encyclo-Speed-ia this November, IDW’s anniversary comic, and the previously approved LEGO Ideas Sonic Mania set.

We at Sonic Stadium will be tuning in Thursday to cover any news and announcements from this stream!

UPDATE: The HARDlight’s Twitter is teasing mobile game announcements during Thursday’s stream.

SECOND UPDATE: Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio (best known for the Yakuza/Judgment series) posted a cryptic reply. It’s unclear if this is them telling you to save money for upcoming games, suggesting there’s some sort of new Sonic arcade game, suggesting Sonic will have some sort of cameo in a future Yakuza/Judgment game, or that the studio itself will be involved in a Sonic game. Luckily we’ll know very soon:

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Shirt Alert! Mad Scientist at RIPT Apparel

Today in Shirt Alert, SCIENCE!

Continue reading Shirt Alert! Mad Scientist at RIPT Apparel
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Sonic Goes Stone Age in Ulala: Idle Adventure Limited Time Event

No stranger to the mobile crossover, Sonic pays a visit to stylish idling RPG Ulala: Idle Adventures from May 24 through June 22.

Continue reading Sonic Goes Stone Age in Ulala: Idle Adventure Limited Time Event
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The Sonic Encyclo-speed-ia Gets a Deluxe Edition This November

Now up for pre-order on Amazon, Dark Horse’s compendium of Sonic lore and history gets a fancy upgrade .

Continue reading The Sonic Encyclo-speed-ia Gets a Deluxe Edition This November
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Who’s That Hedgehog? 85% of Millennials Can Identify Sonic

In a survey of millennials conducted by Casino.org, Sonic’s more recognizable than Donkey Kong, Yoshi, and LeBron James.

Continue reading Who’s That Hedgehog? 85% of Millennials Can Identify Sonic
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Sonic Talk Podcast, Episode 75: Baby Rose Gold Dr. Robotnik

This episode: Revisiting Archie Sonic, the changing Sonic English cast, and the Xbox Series S.

Continue reading Sonic Talk Podcast, Episode 75: Baby Rose Gold Dr. Robotnik
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Sonic and the “Super Game” Show Strong in SEGA SAMMY 2020 Investor Briefing

Who likes financial briefings! Now, don’t raise your hands all at once, I know we’re all really excited to get new financial numbers, but for those of you who aren’t already sifting through the 74-page 2020 Results Presentation on SEGA SAMMY’s investor relations site, here are the highlights.

Although several other sites latched onto the “Super Game” mentioned eight times in the report, the way it appears in the presentation suggests “Super Game” might just be a term they use for a game that they can sell to a global audience. It may include new IP considering they have a separate 3-year plan to globalize their existing IP, but it would be very weird for a 5-year plan to include making some sort of global omni-game containing multiple titles. Not impossible, but very weird.

Other notable bits from the report include:

  • The Sonic series led traditional software sales with 4.4 million units sold, followed by Total War (4 million), Football Manager (3.8 million), and Persona (3 million).
  • Sonic is used as an example of strengthening the brand through media mix, specifically citing the original Sonic movie, the upcoming sequel, and the Netflix series Sonic Prime.
  • Games highlighted for release during fiscal 2021/2022 are Humankind, Shin Megami Tensei V, Total War: Warhammer III, Lost Judgment, and Phantasy Star Online 2 New Genesis.
  • SEGA’s European studio is working on an unspecified FPS project.
  • SEGA is instituting an approach of Remaster-Remake-Reboot in regard to current and past/dormant IP. Examples listed under past IP include Crazy Taxi, Jet Set Radio, Space Channel 5, Rez, Panzer Dragoon, NiGHTS, Shinobi, Virtua Fighter, Altered Beast, House of the Dead, Streets of Rage, and Soul Hackers, all with the asterisk “*Under examination of which IP to utilize.”
  • Game software sales stayed strong, and Free to Play titles were really strong throughout quarantine/social distancing.
  • SEGA SAMMY reiterates that they were hit hard by the economic effects of Covid, leading them to restructure (voluntary retirement, sale/restructure of arcade divisions). Spaces most prominently affected were the arcade business, arcade machines, pachinko/pachislots, and their resorts.
  • If you’ve ever wanted to know how much SEGA SAMMY is worth, they report having 367.6 billion yen in liquid assets as of March 2021 (or roughly 3.4 billion USD, 2.4 billion GBP, or 2.8 billion EUR). This amount is just liquid assets, and does not include the value of property the company owns or the IP it holds.
  • SEGA SAMMY acknowledges responsibilities regarding environmental sustainability, diversity, job satisfaction, and addiction prevention.

Oh, and hey, they’re working on a Gamera pachislot machine, which I personally like for esoteric reasons.

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SEGA Shop (NA) Features New Tangle & Whisper Merch

The North American SEGA Shop is giving IDW’s dynamic duo, Tangle the Lemur and Whisper the Wolf their own line of official merch designs. Fans of the comic can grab shirts, cushions, and fleece blankets.

Items are available to shoppers in many North and South American Countries, as well as Australia and New Zealand.

Sega first dabbled in promoting the breakout team with collectable enamel pins back in 2019. Hardlight followed a year after, running limited time events to unlock them in both Sonic Dash and Sonic Forces: Speed Battle. Given the strict division between SEGA and previous Sonic comics, it’s a fascinating change of pace seeing SEGA’s North American team embrace IDW’s fresh new faces.

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Sonic Dash Adds Pirates and Yogurt For Sonic’s Birthday

In a very weird month for the Sonic Dash series, data mining has revealed the latest version update includes event assets for pirate versions of Sonic and Shadow, as well as Bongo, the Danimals mascot.

Following up on last week’s out-of-nowhere addition of Vector to Sonic Dash 2, Sonic Dash Apple and Android updated to version 4.2.0 yesterday, promising two events for Sonic’s birthday month:

Version History
4.20.0
May 10, 2021
Ahoy! We have a double surprise lined up for a very special birthday this year! Keep a look out for our upcoming swashbuckling event!

Sonic Dash, Apple Store

But, as we all know, if the data is in there, data miners will find it, and we quickly got confirmation of two events included:

Sonic Dash has had some unusual promotional character choices throughout its long, long life, including the likes of Pac-Man, Hello Kitty, the Angry Birds, Longclaw, Teen Sonic, Baby Sonic, and Tangle & Whisper. However, I’m comfortable saying that that Bongo’s haunting stare may the least predictable and most visually startling guest character, even more than Andronic.

Look out for these events being officially added to Sonic Dash soon.

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The Spin: So About Those SEGA NFTs… (Updated)

Update: On May 4, Double Jump.Tokyo announced plans to move onto an Asset Mirroring System to diversify cryptocurrency payment sources and move towards environmentally sustainable options.

Almost a week ago, TSS reported on SEGA buying a stake in Double Jump.Tokyo and announcing plans to mint and sell NFTs. According to the official press release, SEGA expects to sell NFTs of art and music assets from classic SEGA IP, and plans to incorporate the technology into new IP – to which the reaction from Sonic fans on social media were mainly negative.

Debates have since ensued over what does and doesn’t constitute an environmental impact, and whether or not NFTs themselves contribute to that environmental impact. The short answer is, no, SEGA’s NFTs won’t dramatically contribute to the massive global resource sink that is crypto mining. However, this investment indisputably moves SEGA into that economy, and that itself has caused concern for many fans, including myself with regards to what direction their business is moving. In this article, we will address what exactly the technology is, why it’s controversial, and why I personally am concerned.

So let’s address this by first starting with the baseline. What is the blockchain, what is cryptocurrency, and what is an NFT?

Blockchain technology is a manner of storing data where all new data is grouped into chunks (or “blocks”) and added to the end of a long running chain of data. Each chunk has a unique ID or a “hash,” and the blockchain knows what order all the blocks are in because each block contains the hash of the previous block. Because you can only add new blocks at the end of the chain, blockchains act as a running record, or a timeline, of the data. Every person participating in the blockchain keeps copy of the blockchain and becomes partially responsible for helping maintain the blockchain.

Bitcoin and Ethereum are two of the most widely used cryptocurrencies today, and they both currently require “mining” to sustain themselves. The currency itself is the reward users are issued for helping create new blocks and, in turn, helping maintain the blockchain. But the process of creating new blocks is like having your computer play a guessing game with every other mining computer.

I’m oversimplifying this, but here’s basically what happens:

The blockchain needs to get its next block because it contains all the new transaction data that it needs to store (stuff like “Sonic transferred 0.01 Ethereum to Tails”). It does so by incentivizing miners to figure out what the next block’s hash will be. Using an algorithm, your computer processor churns out guesses as quickly as it can. If it can correctly guess what the new hash will be, the new block is created, and the first person to do it gets awarded with some cryptocurrency for doing so. To find the “right” guess for the next hash, miners could be attempting tens of millions of incorrect guesses before a new block is made.

So if you have a computer that can process hash guesses faster than others in this constant worldwide lottery, you have a better chance at “winning” the next block’s reward. Or if you have a really nice GPU capable of mining. Or a whole rack of computers. Or an entire warehouse. Or an industrial complex strategically located near a cheap coal-fueled power grid. All of those processors doing all that computing work to produce tens of millions of wrong guess calculations just so the blockchain can process another ten or fifteen seconds of data, and only one person or business (or pool of people) gets rewarded each time.

Much like cryptocurrency, NFTs are a kind of data that can be stored in a blockchain. NFTs are a piece of metadata that specify a URL to a file, and an owner. So, for example, if I’m a digital artist, and I want to sell my work, I can host it on a server (or find a hosting service), use a service to create an NFT of that art, and sell it on a marketplace with whatever selling rules I choose attached to it. The catch is, it will be bought with cryptocurrency, because NFTs are generally sold in cryptocurrency marketplaces. However, any NFT runs into at least one important risk: if that file specified by the NFT ever disappears from the server, or if the server outright goes away, (or if you run into complications with marketplaces and terms of service) you may eventually wind up owning a dead URL.

Because the whole crypto economy is still in wild flux, a lot of companies are making very public, often cynically motivated moves into crypto to wrangle quick profit out of it, to establish themselves as impact-making players in the crypto space, or to just avoid being left behind. Kodak tried and failed to gain foot in that space, right before moving into pharmaceuticals (no really, they actually did that). You may remember that time years ago when a New York iced tea bottler spiked their stock value by changing their name to “Long Blockchain Corp.” The current NFT boom was in part sparked by the NBA selling collectable video clips, the rarest of which are reselling for literally hundred of thousands of dollars. You can bet every entertainment company is discussing NFTs internally whether they actually intend to mint them or not. And if they aren’t discussing it, their investors are.

Maintaining a blockchain does require a certain amount of power across all the computers working within it, but when people discuss the ecological impact of cryptocurrency and NFTs, they usually mean mining. So long as cryptocurrencies hold significant monetary value, there will be an arms race to get them, and the only ways to compete are through either size or efficiency, and both come with huge caveats.

The majority of mining still uses some combination of renewable and non-renewable energy, with more half of all energy consumption coming from non-renewable sources. More miners and bigger miners mean more demand on power plants. Hydroelectric stations can only produce power at a certain rate, while wind and solar can only generate power when conditions are optimal. However, mining is a process that demands consistent and intensive power 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Thus miners turn to fossil fuel plants, like coal, oil, or natural gas.

When these fossil fuels burn, they release toxins and great amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere (this is what people mean when they refer to a “carbon footprint”). Far, far more than we normally make with our lungs. More carbon dioxide in the atmosphere means higher global temperature because carbon dioxide traps the heat generated by our sun’s radiation. Higher global temperature means disrupted weather patterns. Hotter hots, harsher and more frequent storms, and the oceans slowly encroaching on coastline. On top of the environmental impact, electricity is subject to supply and demand, so higher electrical demand means higher cost for everyone on that electrical grid.

Continued development of more efficient mining technology may, at best, only briefly mitigate the problem. Many cryptocurrency blockchains are designed in such a way that the complexity of the algorithm needed to find the next hash increases once a certain number of blocks are formed. More complexity means more computing power needed, and thus the only possible way more efficient mining could actually work is if advancement itself outpaces the rate that blocks are mined.

So with ALL that out of the way, let’s get back to SEGA.

SEGA entered agreement with and bought a stake in Double Jump.Tokyo, a blockchain/crypto-focused company whose central game My Crypto Heroes allows users to buy and sell game characters and items on crypto marketplaces. My Crypto Heroes’ economy runs on Ethereum, the second most prolific cryptocurrency, just behind Bitcoin. Ethereum is a Proof-of-Work blockchain where anyone’s chance of getting a payday is proportional to the amount of processing power they’re contributing, thus, it is a currency that encourages competitive mining. Ethereum has expressed interest in moving towards a Proof-of-Stake structure that limits who can mine and how much, but they haven’t fully executed on that yet, plus even Proof-of-Stake systems still requires some amount of mining.

We do not yet know what cryptocurrency system SEGA will be operating in, but Ethereum remains at the heart of the NFT marketplace as we currently know it, and Double Jump.Tokyo itself currently deals in Ethereum. Even if SEGA does not do any mining themselves, they will likely be entering an economy that is built on the back of mining.

Thus, opinion splits here:

Do you believe that any engagement with a wasteful mining system is tacit acceptance or approval of that system? OR do you believe SEGA should only be held accountable for what they are directly doing?

Wherever you fall with that will be purely philosophical.

My personal feelings on SEGA selling NFTs is in how it represents them as a business and how they treat their own legacy of games. There isn’t any need use NFTs to make digital collectables. SEGA has made both physical and digital collectables for years through their mobile games, their MMOs, and their partnerships with toy companies. NFTs in concept aren’t a hot new idea. They’re an old idea in a much more obtuse package with a lot of strings attached.

While most of SEGA’s traditional customers don’t own or use Bitcoin or Ethereum, SEGA still sees NFTs as enough of a priority to buy part of a company and get in on crypto. I don’t know if SEGA legitimately sees a long-term plan for positioning themselves in the crypto space, but if they are, selling scans of classic game art is an unambitious and uncreative start.

Optimistically, I’d say that this is just a business diversification that they can divest out of if (when) the bubble bursts. Pessimistically, this is SEGA joining the blockchain to make investors happy or to chase a big pay off. I am not implying in any way that this is SEGA moving away from publishing traditional video games. But companies build reputation by having a clear, strong philosophy, and using that philosophy to drive decisions; I’m concerned that SEGA is buying into this somewhat dubious one – and hopefully they won’t be following in the shallow footsteps of companies like Atari. Nobody should follow in the footsteps of Atari.

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License Global Has Us Asking, Will 2021 Have a Sonic?

Blame the Snow Miser, the Heat Miser, or just plain Covid, but 2021 may very well be the year without a Sonic.

Continue reading License Global Has Us Asking, Will 2021 Have a Sonic?
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Celebrate Golden Week With Sonic & Sega Deals On Steam

Even if you don’t celebrate the four Japanese holidays between April 29 and May 5 that comprise “Golden Week”, Steam wants you to spend it buying games from Japanese developers and publishers, Sega included.

Though a vast number of games are getting solid discounts, you may want to check out these Sonic-centric deals (All prices USD):

Sonic Mania – $4.99
Sonic Mania Encore DLC – $2.49
Sonic Forces – $9.99
Sonic Lost World – $7.49
Sonic Generations – $4.99
Sonic Adventure DX – $1.19
Sonic Adventure 2 – $2.49
Sonic the Hedgehog – $1.24
Sonic the Hedgehog 2 – $1.24
Sonic 3 & Knuckles – $1.24
Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode I – $2.49
Sonic the Hedgehog 4 Episode II – $2.49
Sonic CD – $1.24
Sonic Spinball – $1.24
Sonic 3D Blast – $1.24
Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing – $2.49
Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed – $4.99
NiGHTS Into Dreams – $1.19
Dr. Robotnik’s Mean Bean Machine – $1.24
Puyo Puyo Champions – $4.99
Puyo Puyo Tetris – $11.99
Puyo Puyo Tetris 2 – $20.09
Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz HD – $14.99
Sega Bass Fishing – $1.19

You can check other deals over on Sega’s Golden Week page, if you’re looking to get some Yakuza games, or Persona, or just if you’ve decided it’s finally time to buy Shining Resonance Refrain.

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Sonic Talk Podcast, Episode 74

This episode: Balan Wonderworld Demo, Sonic Flash Games, and IDW Bad Guys

Continue reading Sonic Talk Podcast, Episode 74
The Sonic Stadium may link to retailers and earn a small commission on purchases made from users who click those links. These links will only appear in articles related to the product, in an unobtrusive manner, and do not influence our editorial decisions in any way.

Do the Chaos Emeralds Have a Canonical Origin? Ian Flynn Can’t Tell Us

Do you know who created the Chaos Emeralds? Chaos? Solaris? Dark/Light Gaia?

Continue reading Do the Chaos Emeralds Have a Canonical Origin? Ian Flynn Can’t Tell Us
The Sonic Stadium may link to retailers and earn a small commission on purchases made from users who click those links. These links will only appear in articles related to the product, in an unobtrusive manner, and do not influence our editorial decisions in any way.