Project diva arcade pc
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It’s not the highest resolution pic but here you go:Īccording to this, the game will be launched in November. It uses an Intel Core i3-3220 processor, 4GB DDR3 PC-12600 RAM, an nVidia GTX650 Ti graphics card with 1GB of Video RAM, and a combination of a 64GB SSD hard drive and a standard SATA 500GB hard drive for storage (I assume the OS stuff is kept on the SSD, game data on the 500GB).
Project diva arcade pc windows 8#
This is also a PC-based unit running on Windows 8 Embedded and will have ALL.NET capability. We probably won’t hear about this being used in Western arcade releases until 2014 though.ĪM-Net captured a shot of the spec sheet in Japanese. Best guess is so that they keep the audio on separate cables but no reason both can’t be used. Perhaps the strangest omission from the specifications has to be an HDMI port – instead they are sticking with DVI. The Famitsu report also covers how Sega plans on using this board to power various next generation arcade titles and handle their ALL.NET+ needs.
![project diva arcade pc project diva arcade pc](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/licxo3KKrlI/maxresdefault.jpg)
UPDATE: Famitsu reports that Microsoft Japan has endorsed the board, since it uses Windows 8 Embedded and Direct X11.1. It’s just sticking to the arcade world to power some of Sega’s latest titles. Let me emphasize once again, since there was a small problem in the past on this subject, this is not a new game console prototype or anything like that. It will power their upcoming Project DIVA Arcade Future Tone game. Today at a special “private event” in Japan, Sega has unveiled the newest arcade board that they are calling “Nu”. Big games like Guilty Gear Xrd are going to be using it, I believe that the new Transformers game will be too although that is unconfirmed for now. The RingEdge 2 was quietly unveiled not long ago and has primarily been used for their ALL.NET Pras-Multi network in Japan. Other boards up to the most recent Ringedge 2 have been PC-based. It was in fact, less powerful than the NAOMI, as it eschewed the extra RAM that NAOMI had). The last time something was built from a non-PC source at Sega was the Atomiswave board, which was based on the Dreamcast(launched under the Sammy name. We’re not here to bait with fantasies of a Dreamcast 2 but in the world of arcades, Sega still needs something to power their arcade games with, topped off with fancy names for the configurations like Lindbergh or Europa.įor a while now those configurations have been based on PCs. I know for some Sega fans, hearing new hardware and Sega in a sentence may sound like link trolling.