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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 ...
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.
Yutaka “Yoot” Saito made one of the most memorable titles in video game history, Seaman for the Sega Dreamcast. And he delighted his fans at the recent Game Developers Conference (GDC) in San ...
More of a curiosity than a game, Seaman challenges Dreamcast owners to raise and study a fictitious character who is half man, half fish. Seaman resides in a virtual aquarium and responds to ...
Happy 20th birthday to the Sega Dreamcast! 20 years since the famous 9/9/99 release date, we look back the 9 most iconic games in its library.
The Seaman Deluxe Starter Kit contains the Seaman game, a limited edition clear Seaman VMU, and a Seaman microphone that attaches to the second VMU slot on the Dreamcast controller.
Visual issues aside, though, Seaman is a good game, provided you don't burn yourself out on it.
Back in the year 2000, as the popularity of virtual pet devices like Tamagotchi and Digimon hit their respective peaks, a bizarre video game named Seaman dropped on the Sega Dreamcast. The game ...
Seaman tasked you with raising a bizarre fish/amphibian creature with the face of a gently smiling Japanese man. While you had to care for him, the real draw was the voice interaction via microphone.
Now that the Sega Dreamcast is 10 years old, it's time we look at 10 games that made their mark, from Seaman to Jet Grind Radio.