Difference between revisions of "Outworld 2375 AD"

From Sega Retro

m (→‎Production credits: +console field)
m (phrasing)
Line 20: Line 20:
 
{{stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' is a [[Sega Mega Drive]] fitness science fiction driving game developed by [[Western Technologies]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20230311090425/https://twitter.com/IsaiahVinson1/status/1611658524731252742}} and published by [[HeartBeat Corporation]]. Specifically designed to utilize the [[wikipedia:Activity tracker|fitness sensor]]-integrated Mega Drive peripheral [[HeartBeat Catalyst]]{{magref|sv|15|110}}, it appears to have been released exclusively in the United States in late 1994 in an extremely limited run, and is one of the single-rarest commercially released Mega Drive games in existence.
 
{{stub}}'''''{{PAGENAME}}''''' is a [[Sega Mega Drive]] fitness science fiction driving game developed by [[Western Technologies]]{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20230311090425/https://twitter.com/IsaiahVinson1/status/1611658524731252742}} and published by [[HeartBeat Corporation]]. Specifically designed to utilize the [[wikipedia:Activity tracker|fitness sensor]]-integrated Mega Drive peripheral [[HeartBeat Catalyst]]{{magref|sv|15|110}}, it appears to have been released exclusively in the United States in late 1994 in an extremely limited run, and is one of the single-rarest commercially released Mega Drive games in existence.
  
While currently presumed to have been reached store shelves in some capacity, the obscurity of ''{{PAGENAME}}'' has left its official release status shrouded in mystery. While Western Technologies developers claim the game was completed but left unshipped, multiple collectors reportedly own boxed copies of the game, with HeartBeat appearing to have given it a last-minute, barebones physical release locally distributed to three stores in [[wikipedia:Lansing, Michigan|Lansing, Michigan]].
+
Currently presumed to have been reached store shelves in some capacity, the obscurity of ''{{PAGENAME}}'' has left its official release status shrouded in mystery. While Western Technologies developers claim the game was completed but left unshipped, multiple collectors reportedly own boxed copies of the game, with HeartBeat appearing to have given it a last-minute, barebones physical release locally distributed to three stores in [[wikipedia:Lansing, Michigan|Lansing, Michigan]].
  
 
==Blurb==
 
==Blurb==

Revision as of 04:22, 18 March 2023

n/a

Notavailable.svg
Outworld 2375 AD
System(s): Sega Mega Drive
Publisher: HeartBeat Corporation[1][2]
Developer:
Peripherals supported: HeartBeat Catalyst[1][2]
Genre: Driving

















Number of players: 1
Release Date RRP Code
Sega Mega Drive
US

This short article is in need of work. You can help Sega Retro by adding to it.


Outworld 2375 AD is a Sega Mega Drive fitness science fiction driving game developed by Western Technologies[3] and published by HeartBeat Corporation. Specifically designed to utilize the fitness sensor-integrated Mega Drive peripheral HeartBeat Catalyst[2], it appears to have been released exclusively in the United States in late 1994 in an extremely limited run, and is one of the single-rarest commercially released Mega Drive games in existence.

Currently presumed to have been reached store shelves in some capacity, the obscurity of Outworld 2375 AD has left its official release status shrouded in mystery. While Western Technologies developers claim the game was completed but left unshipped, multiple collectors reportedly own boxed copies of the game, with HeartBeat appearing to have given it a last-minute, barebones physical release locally distributed to three stores in Lansing, Michigan.

Blurb

Kidnapped by intergalactic criminals, you have been pitted in the race for the ultimate prize - your freedom. Race through a planet which began as an experiment in artificial development. Using your heavily armed space hovercraft, you must outmaneuver environmental mutations as well as the deadly inhabitants in a fight for your survival. Go too slow and your aircraft will crash...too fast and it will burn up. Close the hatch, buckle up and hit the turbos.

— Promotional blurb from the Heartbeat Personal Trainer's brochure.[4]


Gameplay

Set on a planet wracked by natural disasters, players begin the game by choosing from one of five different courses.[5] The faster players exercise, the faster their hovercraft will travel. Exercise too fast and the ship will overheat and explode, but exercise too slowly and it will lose momentum and crash.[6]

Production credits

Source:
Developer statements[7]


History

Prerelease

One of the game's only known appearances, published in Sega Visions, issue 15.[2]

Outworld 2375 AD was advertised alongside NHLPA Hockey as "the second wave of HeartBeat games".[2] Early copies of the game were sent to video game magazines for review purposes, with most articles highlighting its unique fitness capabilities; namely, the relation of the player's heart rate to the speed of actual gameplay was easily Outworld's most well-received feature.[6]

Release

As one of the least-known Mega Drive games, Outworld 2375 AD 's release status remained unclear for decades. However, modern research (particularly the efforts of BadUsername25[8][9][10]) eventually uncovered evidence of what seems to be an official, if limited, release. Isaiah Mays-Vinson[3] also spoke with former Western Technologies developers, who seem to be divided on whether the game was actually released.

Outworld's producer, George deGolian, recalls that the game was either left unfinished or unshipped. Artist Eric Iwasaki specifies that "production had wrapped", but that the game never made it to stores.[3] Despite this, multiple collectors in Lansing, Michigan (where Catalyst games were locally distributed post-1994) reportedly own copies of the game - with one collector even confirming Outworld 2375 AD received a standard boxed release with a manual and cartridge. Another collector from the same city claims to own a prototype.[11]

Regardless, evidence strongly suggests that Outworld 2375 AD was officially released sometime in late 1994. Produced in an extremely limited run numbering no more than a few hundred copies, it appears to have been available for purchase from three select Target stores in the state of Michigan, or by mail-ordering the game directly from HeartBeat Corporation. Additionally, fitness retailers like NordicTrack who had previously stocked HeartBeat products were also likely to have access to the company's limited-run games, if they so chose.[11][10]

Legacy

Owing to confusion over Outworld's release status, little of the title has been preserved. Its ROM went undumped until November 2022[3] (under the condition it remain unpublicized at the collector's discretion), and while reportedly sold in a box and with a manual[11][10], no images of either the artwork, manual, or cartridge are believed to publicly exist.

Magazine articles

Main article: Outworld 2375 AD/Magazine articles.

Promotional material

Main article: Outworld 2375 AD/Promotional material.

Technical information

ROM dump status

System Hash Size Build Date Source Comments
Sega Mega Drive
 ?
CRC32
MD5
SHA-1
Cartridge (US)

External links

References


Outworld 2375 AD

Notavailable.svg

Main page | Development | Magazine articles | Promotional material | Region coding


No results

HeartBeat Catalyst
Topics Magazine articles | Promotional material | Personal Trainer | HeartBeat Corporation
Games NHLPA Hockey | Outback Joey | Outworld 2375 AD | PGA Tour Golf II