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Print Club (Japan Vol.1)

  1. Game infos
  2. Parent and Clones
  3. Sound
  4. Driver
  5. Inputs
  6. Controls
  7. Display
  8. Dipswitchs
  9. Roms list
  10. Chips list
  11. Serie
  12. Categories
  13. MAMEinfo
  14. History
Download pclubj.zip (2.5 MB)
Snapshot

Game infos

Description Print Club (Japan Vol.1)
Name pclubj
Manufacturer Atlus
Year 1995
Runnable yes
System arcade /
Number of players ???
Added to MAME .074u2
Romset size 2.5 MB
Romset file 5 files
Romset zip 487 B
Language Japanese
Genre Print Club

Parent and clones

Parent This game is the parent

Sound infos

Sound_channels 1

Driver infos

Driver status preliminary
Driver emulation preliminary
Driver color good
Driver sound good
Driver graphic good
Driver cocktail
Driver protection
Driver savestate yes

Inputs infos

Input service yes
Input tilt no
Input players 1
Input buttons
Input coins 2

Controls infos

type ways minimum maximum sensitivity keydelta reverse
joy 2 no

Display infos

type rotate flipx width height refresh pixclock htotal hbend hbstart vtotal vbend vbstart
raster 0 no 256 224 60 8048640 512 0 256 262 0 224

Dipswitchs

Roms list

console name bios size crc md5 merge sha1 region offset status optional
arcade epr18169.4 524288 5c00ccfb d043ffa6528bb9b76774c96df4edf8222a1878a4 upd 0 good no
arcade epr18170.31 524288 72c631e6 77c4ed793db6cb75346998f38a637db64fd258bd maincpu 1 good no
arcade epr18171.32 524288 6c8eb8e2 bbd885a83269524215c1d8470544086e3e82c05c maincpu 0 good no
arcade epr18172.33 524288 c61d819b 4813ed3161e16099f482e0cf8df3cbe6c01c619c maincpu 100001 good no
arcade epr18173.34 524288 9809dc72 6dbe6b7d4e525aa9b6174f8dc5aee12a5e00a009 maincpu 100000 good no

Chips list

name tag type clock
M68000 maincpu cpu 8948862
SN76496 snsnd audio 3579545
Speaker mono audio
YM3438 ymsnd audio 7670453
uPD7759 upd audio 640000

Serie

Serie : Print Club
  1. Print Club (Japan Vol.1) (1995)
  2. Print Club (Japan Vol.2) (1995)
  3. Name Club (J 960315 V1.000) (1996)
  4. Name Club Ver.2 (J 960315 V1.000) (1996)
  5. Print Club (Japan Vol.4) (1996)
  6. Print Club (Japan Vol.5) (1996)
  7. Print Club 2 Kobe Luminaire '99 (Print Club Custom 3) (J 991203 V1.000) (1997)
  8. Print Club 2 Earth Limited Kobe (Print Club Custom) (J 970808 V1.000) (1997)
  9. Print Club LoveLove (J 970421 V1.000) (1997)
  10. Print Club LoveLove Ver 2 (J 970825 V1.000) (1997)
  11. Print Club 2 (U 970921 V1.000) (1997)
  12. Print Club 2 (U 970921 V1.000) (1997)
  13. Print Club 2 Vol. 6 Winter (J 961210 V1.000) (1997)
  14. Print Club 2 Vol. 6 Winter (J 970121 V1.200) (1997)
  15. Print Club 2 Vol. 7 Spring (J 970313 V1.100) (1997)
  16. Print Club Kome Kome Club (J 970203 V1.000) (1997)
  17. Print Club 2 Pepsiman (J 970618 V1.100) (1997)
  18. Print Club 2 Warner Bros (J 970228 V1.000) (1997)
  19. Print Club Yoshimoto V2 (J 970422 V1.100) (1997)
  20. Print Club Winnie-the-Pooh Vol. 2 (J 971218 V1.000) (1997)
  21. Print Club 2 Vol. 8 Summer (J 970616 V1.100) (1997)
  22. Print Club 2 '97 Winter Ver (J 971017 V1.100, set 1) (1997)
  23. Print Club 2 '97 Winter Ver (J 971017 V1.100, set 2) (1997)
  24. Print Club 2 Vol. 9 Autumn (J V1.100) (1997)
  25. Print Club 2 Puffy (Japan) (1998)
  26. Print Club Winnie-the-Pooh Vol. 3 (J 980406 V1.000) (1998)
  27. Print Club 2 '98 Autumn Ver (J 980827 V1.000) (1998)
  28. Print Club 2 '98 Spring Ver (J 971017 V1.100) (1998)
  29. Print Club 2 '98 Summer Ver (J 980603 V1.100) (1998)
  30. Print Club 2 Felix The Cat (Rev. A) (J 970415 V1.100) (1999)
  31. Print Club 2 Vol. 3 (U 990310 V1.000) (1999)
  32. Print Club 2 Vol. 3 (U 990310 V1.000) (1999)
  33. Print Club Olive (J 980717 V1.000) (1999)
  34. Print Club Goukakenran (J 991104 V1.000) (1999)
  35. Print Club Pokemon B (U 991126 V1.000) (1999)
  36. Print Club Pokemon B (U 991126 V1.000) (1999)
  37. Print Club 2 2000 Summer (J 000509 V1.000) (2000)

Categories

MAMEinfo

0.74u2 [David Haywood]

0.69 [Testdriver]


< Japan >


TODO:

* Need a camera + printer


WIP:

- 13th June 2011: Smitdogg - We got 14 undumped Print Club carts in a bulk buy. One of them is with a Felix the Cat theme.

- 30th June 2010: Smitdogg - We got the English version of Print Club.

- 0.123u2: Edward Swiftwood improved Print Club dipswitches.

- 0.100u2: Aaron Giles fixed protection for Print Club games. Hooked up protection for clones Print Club v.2, 4 and 5.

- 31st August 2005: Dumping Project - Our Japanese contact just shipped a box to Guru with a Sega or Atlus? 'Print Club'.

- 0.74u2: Added 'Print Club (Japan Vol.1)' (Atlus 1995) and clones (Japan Vol.2), (Japan Vol.4) and (Japan Vol.5).

- 0.69: Added (Testdrivers) Print Club (Japan Vol.1) and clones (Japan Vol.2), (Japan Vol.4) and (Japan Vol.5). Mainly for reference, it might not be possible to emulate them as they need a camera + printer.

- 17th February 2003: David Haywood forwarded an update to the Sega C2 driver that added Atlus Print Club, though this may not be officially added.


Recommended Games (Print Club):

Print Club

Print Club Goukakenran

Print Club Kome Kome Club

Print Club LoveLove

Print Club LoveLove Ver 2

Print Club Olive

Print Club Pokemon B

Print Club Winnie-the-Pooh Vol. 2

Print Club Winnie-the-Pooh Vol. 3

Print Club Yoshimoto V2

Print Club 2

Print Club 2 Earth Limited Kobe

Print Club 2 Felix The Cat

Print Club 2 Kobe Luminaire '99

Print Club 2 Pepsiman

Print Club 2 Puffy

Print Club 2 Warner Bros

Print Club 2 Vol. 3

Print Club 2 Vol. 6 Winter

Print Club 2 Vol. 7 Spring

Print Club 2 Vol. 8 Summer

Print Club 2 Vol. 9 Autumn

Print Club 2 '97 Winter Ver

Print Club 2 '98 Autumn Ver

Print Club 2 '98 Spring Ver

Print Club 2 '98 Summer Ver

Print Club 2 2000 Summer

Neo Print (Japan)

Neo Print V1

NeopriSP Retro Collection

Neo Print - '98 NeoPri Best 44

Nandemo Seal Iinkai

Name Club

Name Club Ver.2

Name Club Ver.3

History


Photo Booth published 24 years ago:

Print Club Vol. 1 (c) 1995 Atlus.

Print Club is a small photo booth found at video game arcades in Japan. The Print Club machines produce these small photo stickers (about 2.5 x 2 cm, slightly smaller than a postage stamp) which feature a large variety of superimposed frames which compliment the subject's faces. You just pay 300 yen, stand in front of a video monitor which shows your face, choose the desired frame, pose for the photo, then wait for a sheet of 16 photo stickers which the machine spits out in about a minute. The image quality is not so high (this is probably part of the charm), but the sticker is so small that it really doesn't matter. People affix the stickers on personal articles like notebooks, cell phones, etc. But mainly, school girls collect them to show friends.

- TECHNICAL -

Runs Sega "System C-2" hardware.

Players: 1
Control: 2-way joystick
Buttons: 2

- TRIVIA -

* Print Club History : The Print Club concept was invented in 1994-1995 by 30-year-old Sasaki Miho, a female employee of one of the two companies which developed the Print Club machine. Without a doubt, she has earned a place in Japan's pop culture history. She thought about how neat it would be to have a small photo sticker with your picture on it. And she thought about those cute stickers with cute characters on them which she stuck on her notebook, etc., during her college days. The first Print Club machine was introduced at a video arcade trade fair in Feb. 1995 before making its debut at video arcades later in June the same year. At first, nothing really happened. Then a popular teeny-bopper male singing group called SMAP started offering Print Club photo stickers of themselves to viewers of their TV program. Other TV stations started doing the same thing, offering viewers Print Club stickers by a drawing. This explains why Print Club first became popular among school girls. They were followers of their idol group, SMAP which includes heartthrob Kimura Takuya. Print Club consequently first caught on among Japanese female high schoolers who usually posed in pairs. The fad soon spread to younger school girls and by 1996, Print Club became widely popular among kids and adults alike. From the end of 1995, Print Club machine sales took off at 1.225 million yen per unit. By the end of 1996, 10,000 units were sold in Japan. By spring 1998, 25,000 Print Club machines (and many other imitation machines) were on the market. School girls may spend up to 2,000 yen per day for these stickers. There is even a store in Harajuku, Tokyo which sells old Print Club machines.

* Why It's So Popular : Print Club is called a new communication tool. With so many frames having different messages such as 'Thank you', 'Happy New Year', and 'I love you', people are sticking them on letters, postcards, notebooks, business cards, etc. Even Ginza bar hostesses stick them on their cards so that customers remember them. It is also a social tool for these school girls since they are motivated to assemble these photo stickers with as many of their friends as they can. They want to show how many friends they have by posing with them on these stickers. And they show these stickers to their friends and share gossip. It's like getting your high school yearbook signed by as many people as possible (this custom, by the way, does not exist in Japan). They even use the stickers to set up introductions to the opposite sex. 'Print Club miai' occurs when a friend gives her photo stickers to another friend who shows them to a prospective boyfriend. They decide to meet or not by looking at their photo stickers. There was a time when girls stuck their Print Club stickers on a bulletin board next to the machine and wrote their beeper/pager numbers as well, inviting calls from males for friendship or even 'financially-assisted relationships' (enjo kosai). These bulletin boards were later banned by the police. Print Club has since had a clean, positive image.

* Spin-offs : With the huge success of Print Club, many other companies have gotten into the act. Print Club (a trademark) is no longer alone in the photo sticker market. You now have a wide choice of photo sticker machines from different manufacturers. The number of frames you can use is almost unlimited. But not only photo stickers, Print Club has inspired a slew of other imaginative machines for imaginative novelties. Some are fairly successful while others are not making much money. But none are as popular as photo sticker machines. For example, Sega Enterprises, one of the makers of the original Print Club machine, has introduced "Stamp Club" (a rubber stamp of your face in the frame of your choice), "Name Club" (for business cards [name and phone No. only] featuring a cartoon character), "Movie Club" (6 poses for an animated image), "Calendar Club" (1 sheet for a desktop calendar with your face), "Aura Photo Club" (captures the aura around your head and shoulders), and even "Aroma Club" which dispenses a vial of fragrance which the machine selects after the user answers a few health questions. The aroma is then supposed to help ease the user's health ailment. Then there is Voice de Holder (Voice Key Chain) which is a key chain with a voice message that you record in the booth. You can then give it to the person you want to give the message to. Although Sega Enterprises is leading the pack for these machines, rivals such as SNK, Konami, and Jaleco are also putting out new machines at a fast pace.

- CONTRIBUTE -

Edit this entry: https://www.arcade-history.com/?&page=detail&id=2045&o=2