Puneet Varma (Editor)

1993 in video gaming

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Events

  • March – In Sweden, the Swedish video game magazine Super PLAY (SP) starts. The original name is Super Power.
  • Midway Games embroiled in controversy for its game Mortal Kombat from 1992 when the game is launched for video game consoles in 1993.
  • Nintendo and Silicon Graphics collaborate and begin work on "Project Reality". The project is officially announced in October.
  • Business

  • New companies: Croteam, nVidia, Take-Two, Shiny
  • Defunct companies: dK'Tronics, Epyx
  • Magnavox is acquired by the Carlyle Group
  • MicroProse is acquired by Spectrum HoloByte
  • Arcade

  • June 25 – Mortal Kombat II is released.
  • July 7 – SNK releases Samurai Shodown.
  • October 7 – Namco releases Ridge Racer.
  • December – Sega releases Virtua Fighter, laying the foundations for 3D fighting games.
  • Sega releases Daytona USA
  • Midway releases NBA Jam which revitalizes the sports genre and by 1994 becomes the highest-earning arcade game of all time.
  • Home

  • February – LucasArts releases the first-person space combat simulator X-Wing for the PC.
  • February 21 – Nintendo releases Star Fox for the Super Famicom/SNES, the first game to use the Super FX chip. It introduces the characters Fox McCloud, Falco Lombardi, Peppy Hare and Slippy Toad.
  • March 26 – Nintendo releases Kirby's Adventure, the second Kirby game and the only one for the NES. It introduced Kirby's copy ability and the character Meta Knight.
  • April – Virgin Games publishes The 7th Guest, which becomes a killer app for CD-ROM drives.
  • June – Maniac Mansion: Day of the Tentacle is released by Lucasarts as a sequel to Maniac Mansion.
  • June 6 – Nintendo releases The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening (Game Boy), which becomes the best-selling handheld game in the series.
  • July 14 – Nintendo releases Super Mario All-Stars for the Super NES. It features updated remakes of the first 3 Super Mario Bros. games including the Japanese version of Super Mario Bros. 2, playable outside Japan for the first time.
  • August 6 – Square releases Secret of Mana for the SNES, the second in a series of action role-playing games (the first technically being Final Fantasy Adventure for the Game Boy in 1991).
  • August 20 – Activision releases Return to Zork.
  • September 6 – MicroProse releases Master of Orion.
  • September 23 – Sega releases Sonic CD, which marks the first appearance of Amy Rose and Metal Sonic.
  • September 24 – Broderbund releases the Myst computer game, which goes on to become one of the bestselling computer games of all time.
  • November – Lucasarts releases Sam and Max Hit The Road.
  • November 5 – Mega Man 6 released in Japan for NES.
  • November 11 – Virgin Games releases Disney's Aladdin for the Genesis, voted Genesis game of 1993 by Electronic Gaming Monthly.
  • December 10 – id Software releases Doom, a seminal first-person shooter that advances pseudo-3D graphics technology for computer games.
  • December 17 – Sierra releases Gabriel Knight: Sins of the Fathers.
  • December 17 – Mega Man X is released in Japan for SNES.
  • Electronic Arts publishes Eagle Eye Mysteries, featuring the first use of motion control photography in video games.
  • Bullfrog releases Syndicate.
  • Hardware

  • Sega releases the Model 2, an arcade system board that introduces 3D texture filtering. It becomes their most popular arcade system board.
  • Fujitsu releases the FM Towns Marty in Japan, as the first 32-bit home console, starting the fifth console generation.
  • Panasonic, GoldStar and Sanyo release the first versions of the 3DO 32-bit console
  • Atari Corporation releases the Jaguar home console, calling it the first 64-bit video game system.
  • Commodore Business Machines releases the Amiga CD32 multimedia home console.
  • Nintendo releases a smaller redesigned NES, which allows cartridges to be inserted at the top of the console, instead of the front.
  • Pioneer releases the LaserActive multimedia home console
  • Sega's Mega-CD released in Europe and Australia.
  • References

    1993 in video gaming Wikipedia


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