Rail Chase 2

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Rail Chase 2
Rail Chase 2 arcade cabinet
Developer(s)Sega AM3
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Tomosuke Tsuda
Producer(s)Hisao Oguchi
Mie Kumagai
Designer(s)Kimio Tsuda
Programmer(s)Takeshi Goden
Artist(s)Tetsu Okano
Composer(s)Maki Morrow
Seiichiro Matsumura
Platform(s)Arcade
Release
Genre(s)Rail shooter
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer
Arcade systemSega Model 2

Rail Chase 2 (レールチェイス2) is a rail shooter video game developed and published by Sega for arcades in 1995. It is the sequel to the original Rail Chase arcade game from 1991.

Rail Chase 2 is a game set in a coalmine cart racing along its set tracks through various environments as players shoot at everything they see.[3][4][5][6]

Development

Rail Chase 2 was developed by Japanese studio Sega AM3, led by producer Hisao Oguchi. This was the first game worked on by assistant producer and future AM3 head Mie Kumagai, who had recently transferred from Sega's amusement park division. Kumagai stated she had brought in because AM3's staff had grown to about 100 people at this point, making it difficult for Oguchi to oversee projects directly.[7] Kumagai also shared an ideology with AM3 that arcade games should be created to appeal to not just boys, but to girls, couples, and families. She worked closely with programmer Takeshi Goden on the project.[8] The game is a sequel to 1991's Rail Chase, which was built on the sprite-based Sega System 32. Rail Chase 2 utilizes the Sega Model 2, which allowed for 3D, texture mapped polygons.[5][9][10][11] The sequel also follows Rail Chase: The Ride, an attraction featured at Sega's Joypolis theme park in Yokohama from 1994 to 2001.[12][13] Sega of America's vice president of sales and marketing, Ken Anderson, described Rail Chase 2 as an extension of AM3's popular rail shooter Jurassic Park.[14] Rail Chase 2 was released in Japan in June 1995.[1] It was displayed prominently at the Amusement & Music Operators Association (AMOA) show that September alongside other Sega arcade cabinets including Virtua Fighter 2, Virtua Striker, and Indy 500.[14][15]

Reception

References

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