SEGA – Simultaneously release games worldwide

SEGA – Simultaneously release games worldwide

Developer and publisher SEGA has revealed that they are aiming to release their video games simultaneously around the world.  This means that games should be released in Europe, the US and Japan at the exact same time.

While they can’t promise this will always happen they are strengthening this.

Sega about worldwide releases

There is one more key factor that explains the brisk sales overseas. Before a Japanese game is released overseas, it is localized into the language of each country and region. For example, Persona 5 has been translated into three languages (English, traditional Chinese, and Hangul). No matter if a game is popular in Japan, it is unlikely to win over fans around the world if the localization is insufficient.

The Sega Group has localization studios that make a huge difference when games are sold overseas. Atlus became a member of Sega Group due to the transfer of business in 2013, which has a studio located in California, U.S.A. The studio understands both Japanese and American games very well, and is able to localize Japanese games in a way that accurately conveys the unique world views of Japanese titles to local gamers.

The studio is able to maximize the entertainment value of localized games that reflect these unique world views, and this has led to very positive reviews from local gamers. During the product development stage, game content is shared with the localization team for translation before the development is finished, facilitating the rapid release of foreign language versions of the game. 

We will strengthen such collaboration further with the aim of simultaneously releasing games around the world, which is an objective of Road to 2020.

If only they where able to pull this off and start a trend that other developers and publishers would follow. It’s like the situation is with Netflix, where content sometimes comes out way later … due to localisation (subtitles) or because of rights when it comes to tv stations wanting to broadcast it first or so on.

I applaud SEGA for wanting to go for this approach, what about you guys?