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Miracle Stadium

Developer: Sammy · Published by Sammy · 2004
The last publicly released Atomiswave game nobody had dumped, until now.
Not yet reviewed
About This Game

Miracle Stadium is an arcade baseball game built for Sammy's Atomiswave hardware, a platform based on the Sega Dreamcast's architecture. Aimed at a younger audience with a bright, approachable presentation, it was one of the later titles released for the Atomiswave during the system's commercial life in Japanese arcades in the mid-2000s.

The Atomiswave was Sammy's attempt at a low-cost, swappable-cartridge arcade platform, sharing its core design with the Dreamcast and its NAOMI arcade cousin. That shared DNA is exactly why Atomiswave games have proven such natural candidates for preservation on Dreamcast hardware: the two are close enough that a dumped Atomiswave title can be made to run on a retail Dreamcast through an optical drive emulator or homebrew loader.

For years Miracle Stadium held an unusual distinction among collectors and preservationists. It was understood to be the last publicly released Atomiswave game that had never been dumped and archived, leaving a single visible gap in the otherwise documented Atomiswave library. In June 2026 that gap was finally closed when the game was preserved and made playable on Dreamcast, released to the community as a GDI image alongside the unreleased football title Premier Eleven.

Miracle Stadium is a modest game on its own terms, a children's baseball title, but its preservation matters: completing the public record of a commercial arcade platform is the kind of quiet, unglamorous work that keeps a system's history whole.

In the News1 mentions
Jun 192026
A Lost Atomiswave Football Game Is Finally Playable on Dreamcast
Premier Eleven, an unreleased Atomiswave football game lost for twenty years, has been dumped and made playable on Dreamcast, along with Miracle Stadium.
Preservation