

Western composers and musicians now had a more familiar and reliable method for translating their instruments to the Sega Genesis hardware. Sega of America was very pleased with GEMS and went on to distribute it to their various developers and publishers. The result was GEMS, a 16-bit sound driver with a focus on MIDI interactivity. The team consisted of Jonathan Miller creating drivers and firmware, Burt Sloane programming, and Chris Grigg and Mark Miller providing the software’s overall design. Seeking to address this, Sega of America reached out to developer Recreational Brainware to produce a solution. Unlike Japanese composers, who were more familiar with writing sound drivers and working with FM synthesis, their Western counterparts struggled to produce quality sounds. Before G.E.M.S., we as composers/sound designers had almost nothing.Įarly Sega Genesis hardware documentation was limited in all areas, but especially in audio capabilities.

was definitely the best sound driver/editor that was made available to the general public during the first half of the 90's. Izzy's Quest for the Olympic Rings (unreleased).WWF WrestleMania: The Arcade Game (1995).Golf Magazine: 36 Great Holes Starring Fred Couples (1995).Brutal Unleashed: Above the Claw (1995).
