Sega Saturn · isometric platformer

Sonic 3D Blast

ソニック3Dブラスト

Japan: January 1, 1996 · Dev: Traveller's Tales · Music: Jun Senoue

About this game

Sonic 3D Blast is a 1996 isometric platformer for the sega saturn, developed by Traveller's Tales, with music by Jun Senoue. It belongs to the Sonic the Hedgehog series.

Collector's Guide

Japan Release January 1, 1996

Region & Compatibility

The Sega Saturn enforces a strict regional lockout in hardware. A Japanese NTSC-J console will not boot PAL or NTSC-U discs, and vice versa. To play import software you need one of three solutions: a mod chip soldered to the board, a cartridge that plugs into the expansion slot and overrides the region check (such as an Action Replay or dedicated region-free cart), or a replacement region-free BIOS chip. Note that region unlocking alone does not change the video refresh rate — a PAL console playing an NTSC-J disc will still run at 50 Hz unless a separate frequency mod is also applied.

Maintenance Tips

The Sega Saturn reads GD-style discs but uses a standard CD-ROM drive, so lens care is the same as any optical drive: keep discs clean, handle them by the edges, and store them in cases. The more well-known maintenance issue is the internal CR2032 battery that backs the SRAM save memory and the real-time clock. This battery was typically rated for one to two years of standby use; on any console manufactured in the 1990s, it has long since expired. The first symptom is the system asking for the date and time at every boot. If that prompt appears, replace the battery promptly — save data corruption or total loss follows shortly. The battery can be swapped while the console is powered on (hot-swap) to avoid losing existing saves.

What to Watch Out For

Before buying, these are the points worth knowing — from someone who handles original Japanese Sonic 3D Blast copies regularly.

The Saturn asks for the date and time every time I turn it on. Is this a problem?

Yes. This means the internal CR2032 battery that backs the real-time clock and SRAM save memory is dead or nearly dead. Your save data is at risk of corruption or total loss. Replace the battery as soon as possible. To keep your existing saves, replace it while the console is powered on (hot-swap method) so power to the SRAM is never interrupted.

Will a Japanese Saturn play North American or European games?

No, not without modification. The Saturn has a hardware region lock that prevents discs from other regions from booting. You will need a mod chip, a region-free expansion cartridge, or a BIOS replacement to play import titles.

How much internal save memory does the Saturn have, and what happens when the battery dies?

The Saturn's internal save memory is a small battery-backed SRAM — enough for a handful of game saves. When the CR2032 battery dies, both the system clock and all internal save data are lost with no warning. External backup cartridges (which use their own batteries) provide additional save storage but are subject to the same battery-death risk.

Before You Buy

Things worth knowing before you buy Sonic 3D Blast

A short checklist for buying a used Sega Saturn disc wisely — useful with any seller, anywhere.

  1. Choose a seller who tests it before shipping

    A copy that has actually been powered on and checked is a known quantity. An untested one is a gamble you only settle after it arrives.

    Look for a seller who states it was function-tested and says what they confirmed. A serious seller can tell you exactly what was checked.

  2. Check the disc for scratches

    Deep scratches on the playing surface cause freezes and read errors. Light surface marks are usually fine.

    Ask for a clear photo of the disc's underside. A seller who tested it will confirm it loads and plays through.

  3. Make sure it fits your console

    This is a Japanese Saturn disc. The Saturn is region-locked, so a Japanese disc needs a Japanese console or a region workaround.

    Play it on a matching Japanese console or a region-free system, and confirm the listing states the region.

  4. Saturn saves rely on a console battery

    The Saturn keeps internal saves on a CR2032 battery in the console (not the disc). A dead console battery loses internal saves and resets the clock.

    This is about your console, not the disc — but worth knowing so saves aren't lost.

  5. Read the seller's reviews and return policy

    A 100% positive record across thousands of sales is close to a guarantee — packing, communication and problem-solving all work for everyone. A return policy protects you if something is off.

    Read the feedback and confirm a clear return window before you buy.

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