25 Years Later, Nintendo's Biggest Rival Launched a Killer Gaming Console - And Failed Spectacularly
Briefly

Edison’s philosophy of viewing failure as part of the learning process is mirrored in Sega’s history, particularly with the Dreamcast, a console that, despite its failures, pushed gaming innovation.
The Dreamcast was ultimately built on the foundation of earlier failures, yet it showcased impressive technology with features like its 128-bit CPU and the unique VMU.
While the Dreamcast launched with groundbreaking technology and online capabilities, its failure can be traced back to Sega’s history of alienating developers and missteps in the console market.
Despite the Dreamcast being revolutionary for its time with features like online gaming and innovative hardware, it could not overcome Sega’s troubled past and mismanagement.
Read at Inverse
[
]
[
|
]