Difference between revisions of "Garfield: The Lost Levels"
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Revision as of 17:13, 29 October 2018
Garfield: The Lost Levels | ||||||||||
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System(s): Sega Mega Drive | ||||||||||
Publisher: Sega | ||||||||||
Developer: Sega InterActive | ||||||||||
Genre: Action | ||||||||||
Number of players: 1 | ||||||||||
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This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
Garfield: The Lost Levels is a special version of Garfield: Caught in the Act that was made available exclusively through the Sega Channel service in North America.
The Lost Levels is much the same game as Caught in the Act, but features extra levels. On the Mega Drive, Caught in the Act shipped with five levels, but more were originally planned, slowly being scrapped due to time restraints. Two of these, a snowy viking-theme stage called "Bonehead the Barbarian" and a Robin Hood-style level called "Slobbin Hood", made it into the Sega Game Gear version, while "Alien Landscape" was finished for the PC port. However, all three plus a stage set in ancient Rome were at one point destined for the Mega Drive release.
In addition, a missing train segment in Catsablanca was also scrapped late in development (so much so that a screenshot of it appears on the back of the US box). Magazine previews and a special promotional T-shirt hinted at some of these stages existing, but developers have gone on record to state that they were never fully finished in time for the original cartridge release of the game.
The Lost Levels, having been handled by a different team, is thought to have brought some of these levels back, however the details of its contents are sketchy. The Bonehead the Barbarian stage is thought to have been included, as was the missing train segment in Catsablanca, but the status of the rest is not known (although the plural, "levels" would suggest at least one more stage was added).
Details of Garfield: The Lost Levels are scarce because the game was only distributed through the US Sega Channel service for a limited period of time during the mid-1990s. No dumps of the game exist, the game has never been re-released and no known footage of the game survives, meaning the only physical evidence of its existence is promotional material for the Sega Channel service.
Magazine articles
- Main article: Garfield: The Lost Levels/Magazine articles.