Block Out for the NES - Another lost prototype released!!!

Started by TL, September 02, 2013, 19:12:51 PM

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TL

It probably made a lot of sense to bring Block Out to the NES.

When American Technos announced its intention to release the game at the 1990 Winter Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the video game industry was in the middle of a mini goldrush for puzzle games, thanks to the monster success that was Alexey Pajitnov's Tetris.

And Block Out wasn't just any old puzzle game; it, too, came out of an exotic Soviet Union that Americans were still fascinated by. That one-two punch made it an obvious marketing win.

Blockout was originally designed as a home computer game by Russian mathematician Alexander Ustaszewski, and distributed through publisher California Dreams. It plays like a 3D version of Tetris, but in a grid insead of a straight line, and with way more complicated pieces (Tetris has seven; Blockout has forty-one).

The NES version is actually based on Technos' own arcade rendition of the original, which added new features like a two-player competitive mode and a character in the mysterious (and kind of annoying) Block Master, who taunted you between levels.

A prototype of the NES version was randomly found at a Goodwill by game collector Jim Cook. This is, as far as we're aware, one of two prototypes of the game that still exist and it is, in the estimation of the other one's owner, the more complete of the two. Fellow collector Steve Lin was generous enough to acquire the game for $2,000 in a public auction in 2012 and release the ROM to the masses.

SOURCE: The Lost Levels - click for more info!

[align=center:1143vhr0]Block Out - Unreleased NES Game Prototype[/align:1143vhr0]

TrekMD


Going to the final frontier, gaming...


TL

Quote from: "TrekMD"I've downloaded this to try it out.  :)

Cool, let us know how it compares to the Lynx version!

davyk


guest4826

Hmm, here's one from out in left field for me. I never even knew this was available for the NES or was even going to be. I have it for the Lynx and it's awesome, so maybe I will try out this NES version and see how it compares. Cool stuff. The insanity of finding it in a Goodwill though. That just almost seems wrong. Then again, at least it didn't end up in a landfill somewhere.

TrekMD

Yes, the way it was found is just insane!  It was must meant to be found! :)

Going to the final frontier, gaming...


guest4826

Quote from: "TrekMD"Yes, the way it was found is just insane!  It was must meant to be found! :)

Might be. It has to be something like that because usually stuff like this gets trashed by the developers, sadly. Seems that Goodwill is the junkyard foir old gaming stuff now? This isn't the first proto I have ever heard of being found there. I'm wondering if what is happening, sadly, is that these old developers are passing away and they had the Betas at home. Family donated the stuff to Goodwill not knowing what it was? It has to be what's happening. Just seems odd to find Betas of Unreleased games like that Versus a Beta version of a game that was released.