News

Seaman was released first in Japan, where it has already become the bestselling Japanese Dreamcast release of all time. In America, publicists were expecting it to sell out in its first weekend ...
I've been talking to my Dreamcast lately. Even stranger, it's been talking back. My wife thinks I've lost it, but actually I'm playing Seaman, a new videogame from Sega. Seaman is the first ...
Seaman landed on the Japanese Dreamcast in 1999, taking advantage of the console's optional microphone accessory to allow gamers to talk to an odd breed of freshwater fish.
It has a piece of intelligence, and most of the users of Seaman in Japan are not gamers. They have to buy the Dreamcast to get Seaman -- so Seaman costs them $250. They aren't gamers?
GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers. On Wednesday, Ascii announced that it will publish the Sony PlayStation 2 version of Seaman. The game is being developed by Vivarium, which also ...
The biggest Japanese Dreamcast game of all time is at last getting a full sequel. Tentatively titled Seaman 2, Sega will bringing the sequel to the PS2 platform. Vivarium, the developer of the ...
Seaman is spreading. The little fish that could, the fish with a 'tude who's simply misunderstood, is making his way beyond Sega's Dreamcast and onto the PC. The result will be Seaman like you've ...
Bizarre Japanese fish conversation simulator Seaman is coming to 3DS, according to Andriasang. The Dreamcast original boasted a microphone that let you talk to the titular fish-with-a-face, giving ...
Oddball Dreamcast game Seaman is being revived for release on 3DS, a Japanese newspaper report has revealed. Seaman, which tasks players with caring for a curious fish-beast pet, will be the first ...
When it was released on the Dreamcast in 1999, Seaman was a big hit in Japan, spawning a direct sequel on PS2. The "game" was actually more of a simulated pet maintenance type of experience that ...
Vivarium's voice recognition oddity Seaman, released on Dreamcast (and later PS2 in Japan), is getting a sequel in 2006, SEGA announced in Japan late last week. Like the '99 Dreamcast version ...
There are few games as quirky as Dreamcast's 2000 release Seaman.Now it seems Seaman could be getting a new sequel, according to a pair of tweets from the game's creator.