THE PANISONIC 3DO R.E.A.L Interactive System! Via ShadowPlay Nvidia Capture Windows X 64bit!
3DO Interactive Multiplayer
The 3DO Interactive Multiplayer, often called the 3DO, is a home video game console developed by The 3DO Company. Conceived by entrepreneur and Electronic Arts founder Trip Hawkins, the 3DO was not a console manufactured by the company itself, but a series of specifications, originally designed by Dave Needle and R. J. Mical of New Technologies Group, that could be licensed by third parties. Panasonic produced the first models in 1993, and further renditions of the hardware were released in 1994 by GoldStar (now LG Electronics) and in 1995 by Sanyo.DeveloperThe 3DO CompanyManufacturerPanasonic, Sanyo, GoldStarTypeHome video game consoleGenerationFifth generation eraRelease date
NA: October 4, 1993[1]JP: March 20, 1994EU: June 11, 1994[2]KOR: December 3, 1994
Lifespan1993–1996Introductory price
US$699.99JP¥79,800KOR₩399.000
DiscontinuedLate 1996[3][4]Units sold2 million[5]MediaCD-ROMCPU32-bit custom ARM CPU (ARM60) @ 12.5 MHz[6]Memory2 MB RAM, 1 MB VRAMStorage32 KB SRAMOnline servicesPlanned but canceled[3]Best-selling gameGex, over 1 million[7][8][note 1]SuccessorPanasonic M2 (canceled