As with any creative project, the final versions of videogames often differ wildly from their first trailers. History is full of games which were barely recognisable from their original forms when they finally landed on shop shelves, so join us now, as we take a look at some of our favourites and subscribe for more videos! http://tinyurl.com/SubToOxbox
Remember when 2011’s Duke Nukem Forever was originally announced? Maybe not, because it’s entirely possible to be a young adult human who was not even alive when the game first started development.
Duke Nukem Forever took roughly forever to develop, hence the name, so it’s hardly surprising that, over the course of that development, it changed dramatically. And we’re not just talking about changing dramatically from a game everyone wanted to play to a game no-one wanted to play.
Initial trailers included thrilling shootouts from the back of moving trucks, riding minecarts like Indiana Jones, low-flying fighter jets and destructible buildings, all elements that were conspicuous by their absence when the game finally came out in 2011.
Similarly, the first ever trailer for what would become the first Halo game gives us a glimpse of what could have been: a surreal parallel universe where Halo was a third-person shooter that launched on Mac computers.
However, the year after that first Halo trailer, Microsoft bought Bungie, and the year after that, in 2001, the game launched as Halo: Combat Evolved on the original Xbox, with an entirely different plot and no online play because Xbox Live wasn’t even invented yet, if you can imagine such a thing.
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Outside Xbox brings you daily videos about videogames, especially Xbox One games and Xbox 360 games. Join us for new gameplay, original videos, previews, lists, Show of the Week and other things (ask us about the other things).
Thanks for watching and be excellent to each other in the comments.
Find us at http://www.outsidexbox.com
Subscribe to us at http://www.youtube.com/outsidexbox
Like us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/outsidexbox
Follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/outsidexbox
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Remember when 2011’s Duke Nukem Forever was originally announced? Maybe not, because it’s entirely possible to be a young adult human who was not even alive when the game first started development.
Duke Nukem Forever took roughly forever to develop, hence the name, so it’s hardly surprising that, over the course of that development, it changed dramatically. And we’re not just talking about changing dramatically from a game everyone wanted to play to a game no-one wanted to play.
Initial trailers included thrilling shootouts from the back of moving trucks, riding minecarts like Indiana Jones, low-flying fighter jets and destructible buildings, all elements that were conspicuous by their absence when the game finally came out in 2011.
Similarly, the first ever trailer for what would become the first Halo game gives us a glimpse of what could have been: a surreal parallel universe where Halo was a third-person shooter that launched on Mac computers.
However, the year after that first Halo trailer, Microsoft bought Bungie, and the year after that, in 2001, the game launched as Halo: Combat Evolved on the original Xbox, with an entirely different plot and no online play because Xbox Live wasn’t even invented yet, if you can imagine such a thing.
---
Outside Xbox brings you daily videos about videogames, especially Xbox One games and Xbox 360 games. Join us for new gameplay, original videos, previews, lists, Show of the Week and other things (ask us about the other things).
Thanks for watching and be excellent to each other in the comments.
Find us at http://www.outsidexbox.com
Subscribe to us at http://www.youtube.com/outsidexbox
Like us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/outsidexbox
Follow us on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/outsidexbox
Put a t-shirt on your body http://www.outsidexbox.com/tshirts
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