![]() ![]() The company released a variety of expansion modules for the LaserActive called PACs, two of which allowing users to play Sega Genesis/Sega CD and TurboGrafx-16/Super CD games, respectively. These PACs costed an extra $600, and could take in both cartridges from those systems as well as override the disc drive to read discs from those respective CD add-ons. ![]() Each PAC also had its own exclusive titles released on LaserDisc which used the unique hardware for playing games. This actually ended up being the only means by which games were released for the LaserActive: owners had to purchase both PACs to experience the entirety of the system’s library, and no game was ever released that did not require either one.Ī full ten years after Dragon’s Lair set arcades on fire, and with CD-based machines from NEC, Sega and Amiga on the horizon, Pioneer decided to step into the gaming market by leveraging its homegrown media format. ![]()
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