SegaSonic fan animation
@SSM_Uug_Naa shared a self‑taught fan animation called SegaSonic “See you,” which gathered about 362 likes and 75 reposts and highlights animator creativity in retro gaming fandom. The clip circulated among fan‑animation communities over the past two days (x.com).
A Sonic fan animator’s short clip built around SegaSonic Popcorn Shop’s “See You Again” track spread across fan circles this weekend after creator @SSM_Uug_Naa posted it on X. (x.com) The account name matches a YouTube creator page, “Uug_naa,” that describes the animator as “self-taught” and lists 1.71K subscribers and 64 videos. The same page shows recent Sonic-focused tests and reanimations posted in late March and early April 2026. (youtube.com) Search results for the post identify the animation as “SegaSonic ‘See you,’” and the X link in circulation points to a short fan-made video rather than an official Sega upload. Newgrounds search results also show a same-day “SegaSonic” post under the name UugNaa. (x.com) (newgrounds.com) The music reference matters because SegaSonic Popcorn Shop is one of the stranger Sonic spinoffs: a 1993 Sega arcade vending machine in Japan that dispensed popcorn while players triggered a mini-game on Sega System C-2 hardware. Sega Retro and Sonic Retro both describe it as a popcorn machine tied to a short game sequence. (segaretro.org) (info.sonicretro.org) “See You Again” is one of the game’s listed soundtrack cues, and fan uploads of the track on YouTube, SoundCloud, and game-music archives peg it at roughly 25 seconds. That short ending theme makes it a natural fit for brief animation loops on social platforms. (youtube.com) (soundcloud.com) (smashcustommusic.net) The clip’s traction also fits a wider Sonic fan pattern: obscure Sega material keeps resurfacing through reanimations, music uploads, and preservation pages long after the original hardware disappeared from arcades. Sega Retro says service for SegaSonic Popcorn Shop machines ended on March 31, 2017. (segaretro.org) Uug_naa’s recent uploads suggest the animator has been building a Sonic portfolio in public, with pencil tests, widescreen Sonic CD reanimation teasers, and progress clips posted over the past few weeks. The SegaSonic piece landed into an audience already primed for short-form fan animation. (youtube.com) What circulated over the past two days was not a new Sega project but a fan-made goodbye built from a 1993 arcade oddity and a creator’s self-taught animation practice. In Sonic fandom, that combination was enough to give a half-minute relic another run. (x.com) (youtube.com)