Dreameye

Dreameye
Manufacturer Sega
Type Digital Camera
Generation Sixth generation era

The Dreameye is a digital camera released for the Sega Dreamcast in 2000 in Japan only. It was designed to be used as a webcam and a digital still camera, and there were plans for games to involve the Dreameye.

The Dreameye was only released in Japan, and Dreameye functionality was absent in non-Japanese versions of the games it could be used with. It came with the Divers 2000 Dreamcast, but was also sold separately. The DreamEye can be seen as the first use of a digital camera on a non-handheld video games console.

History

The Dreameye was originally unveiled by Sega in 2000 although it was in development since 1998 and in conceptual stages long before that.

Features

The Dreameye came with a microphone headset, a stand, batteries, software, a cable to connect the Dreameye to the Dreamcast and a Dreameye microphone plug card. The Dreameye takes pictures at approximately 0.3 megapixels (640×480 pixels),[1] but in order to send them via e-mail the pictures in question had to be first saved to a Dreamcast memory card. Upon transferring the pictures off of the card they resized to a resolution of 320px by 240px.

The Dreameye concept was created as the Dreamcast's answer to webcams at the time. It came bundled with the photo editing program, Visual Park which allowed users to view or send files on the camera, or edit them with seals and stamps on top of the images. Stickers included famous characters from Sega's flagship Sonic series.[2]

Technical specifications

Supported Games

See also

References

  1. "Dreamcast Digital Video Camera Unveiled". IGN. IGN Entertainment. 16 February 2000. Retrieved 18 October 2009.
  2. "Dreameye Dreamcast Camera". DreamcastGaga. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
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