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JJ says

What is the Sega Mega Drive?

The Sega Mega Drive (sold in North America as the Genesis) is a home console by Sega, released in 1988 in Japan and 1990 in Europe. With more than 30 million units sold it was Sega’s most successful console — and in Europe it gave the SNES a genuine run for its money. In many countries the Mega Drive actually won that battle.

The Mega Drive is home to Sonic the Hedgehog, Streets of Rage, Mortal Kombat, Desert Strike and hundreds of other classics. The hardware is remarkably robust: cartridges almost always still work, the console itself has very few vulnerable parts, and the video signal quality via SCART RGB is genuinely excellent for its era.

A bonus: the Mega Drive has an expansion port on the side — for the 32X or the Mega CD. Not required, but fun curiosities for enthusiasts.

Editions of the Sega Mega Drive

EditionYearRegionSizeBest for
Mega Drive 11988–1993WorldwideLarge, headphone jackAudiophiles / collectors
Mega Drive 21993–1997WorldwideMore compact, no headphoneMost people
Mega Drive 3 (Genesis 3)1997USCompactNiche
Mega Drive Mini2019WorldwideModern re-releaseBeginners

Advice: The Mega Drive 2 is the most commonly found version at thrift stores and marketplaces, works great and is compact. The Mega Drive 1 has a headphone jack on the front — handy if you also want to use the volume knob for audio control.

Getting started {#getting-started}

Here’s what you need to play today:

Tip

The Mega Drive has one of the best RGB outputs of its generation. Invest in a quality SCART cable — the difference from composite is enormous. Got a modern TV without SCART? A SCART-to-HDMI converter does the job well.

Screenshot of Sonic the Hedgehog 2

Sonic the Hedgehog 2

Sega's mascot at his fastest.

Screenshot of Streets of Rage 2

Streets of Rage 2

Widely praised as one of the greatest beat-'em-ups ever made.

Screenshot of Mortal Kombat

Mortal Kombat

On the Mega Drive with blood — unlike the SNES version.

Screenshot of Desert Strike

Desert Strike

Helicopter action that pulls you in immediately.

Screenshot of Gunstar Heroes

Gunstar Heroes

Spectacular run-and-gun by Treasure.

Screenshot of Phantasy Star IV

Phantasy Star IV

One of the best RPGs of the 16-bit generation.

Screenshot of Road Rash

Road Rash

Motorcycle racing with fists — timeless chaos.

Where to find games?

Physical

Watch out: PAL vs NTSC

The Mega Drive has region locking. PAL games (Europe) work on a European console. Japanese or American games require an adapter or a region mod. Also note the cartridge shape: Japanese and European versions are shaped differently.

Digital: Mega Everdrive

A Mega Everdrive loads games via SD card. Supports the full international Mega Drive library as well as Master System games (with adapter).

Mega Drive games on Amazon

Common problems & fixes

Mods & upgrades

Homebrew

The Mega Drive homebrew scene is active. New games are regularly released, from shoot-‘em-ups to platformers. Via a Mega Everdrive you can play them straight away. The community is international, friendly and easy to find.


Sonic, Streets of Rage, and a library full of forgotten classics: the Mega Drive deserves a spot in every retro collection.