Underground is a cancelled action / open world game that was in development by Volition for the Playstation 2 / Xbox. The game was set in england and players would have took control of a thief, free to explore the city and to decide what and how to steal. Undergound was in development for about [...]
The awesome people at Rare Ware Central have shared a Banjo Kazooie: Grunty’s Revenge Debug ROM and a Diddy Kong Pilot ROM (that was later released as Banjo Pilot). You can download these 2 unseen games at Rare Ware Central beta page! It’s always nice to see Rare beta games publicly preserved, as they are one [...]
Dragonflight: Chronicles of Pern is an action adventure based on the Dragonriders of Pern book series by Anne McCaffrey, that was in development in 1998 / 1999 by Grolier Interactive for PC and Playstation. Initially the game was going to have a style similar to Diablo, but after a couple of years of development, Dragonflight [...]
Boo! is a cancelled platform game that was in development by Micropose for the Super Nintendo, Genesis / Mega Drive and Amiga in 1994. As we can read on the website of Boo!’s producer Stuart Whyte: Designed by Richard Lemarchand, Boo! was a side on platformer inspired by Sonic and Mario, we wanted to create [...]
Shaolin Streets is a cancelled beat ‘em up that was in development in 2005 by Jailed Games for the Playstation 2 and PSP, before it was canned and reworked for the Xbox 360 and Playstation 3. A playable beta version of Shaolin Streets was somehow leaked online, so you can have a look at the [...]
ZethN64 has found a rather unused enemy function in Zelda: Ocarina of Time, that only works when the 64DD code is on (aka when the 64DD + Zelda URA expansion would be attatched to the 1.0 game). An invisible Redead enemy that isn’t used in neither OOT or MQ. Check the video below! Edit
U64 is an archive with articles, screens and videos for cancelled, beta & unseen videogames. Every change & cut creates a different gaming experience: we would like to save some documents about this evolution for curiosity, historic and artistic preservation.