List of Sega First-person Shooters

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Updated June 9, 2017 5 items

List of popular first-person shooter games developed by Sega, listed alphabetically with cover photos art available. These famous first-person shooter games were all developed by Sega, so if you're a fan of the company you might recognize many of these titles. This list of fun Sega first-person shooter games can be filtered for specific information, such as what year the game came out and who the publisher is. Looking for a list of fun to play Sega first-person shooter games? Well this is the perfect resource for exactly that.

List games include BioShock, Halo: Combat Evolved and more.

This list answers the questions, โ€œWhat first-person shooter games has Sega made?โ€ and "What are the best Sega first-person shooter games?"
  • Astron Belt is an early laserdisc video game and third-person space combat rail shooter, released in 1983 by Sega in Japan and licensed to Bally Midway for release in the United States. Developed in 1982, it is commonly cited as the first laserdisc game. The game's unveiling at the 1982 AMOA show in Chicago marked the beginning of laserdisc fever in the videogame industry, and its release in Japan the following year marked the first commercial release of a laserdisc game. However, its release in the United States was delayed due to several hardware and software bugs, by which time Dragon's Lair had beaten it to public release there. Astron Belt was, however, the first laserdisc game released in Europe.
  • Robotica
    Jan 01 1995
    Robotica, also known as Robotica Cybernation Revolt in Europe, and Deadalus in Japan is a first-person shooter for the Sega Saturn in 1995.
  • Metal Head
    Jan 01 1994
    Metal Head is a 3D first-person shooter mecha simulation video game developed and published by Sega, and released in 1995 for the Genesis/Mega Drive's 32X add-on, allowing for fully texture-mapped polygons.
  • Star Trek
    Jan 01 1982
    Star Trek: Strategic Operations Simulator is a space combat simulation arcade game based on the original Star Trek television program, and released by Sega in 1983. It is a vector game, with both a two-dimensional display and a three-dimensional first-person perspective. The player controls the Starship Enterprise, and must defend sectors from invading Klingon ships. The game was presented in two styles of cabinets: an upright standup, and a sit-down/semi-enclosed deluxe cabinet with the player's chair modeled after the Star Trek Motion Picture's bridge chairs with controls integrated into the chair's arms.
  • SubRoc-3D
    Jan 01 1983
    SubRoc-3D is an arcade game released in 1982 by Sega, and the first such game to provide a three-dimensional image to the player, using a display that delivers individual images to each eye. This was achieved using a special eyepiece, a viewer with spinning discs to alternate left and right images to the player's eye from a single monitor. This is to be distinguished from the visuals used in vector games like Battlezone or 3D polygonal games like Virtua Fighter, which use algorithms to display appropriately scaled and rotated graphics to provide the illusion of three dimensions in a two-dimensional display. The graphics in SubRoc are two-dimensional, handdrawn sprites displayed in a three-dimensional tableau. It was adapted for ColecoVision, with simulated 3-D effects, by Arnold Hendrick and Philip Taterczynski of the Coleco game design staff, with programming by David Wesely of 4D Interactive Systems. SubRoc-3D appears briefly in the movie War Games.