Skip to main content

Obsidian’s canceled Aliens RPG for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 emerges online

Aliens
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Aliens: Colonial Marines was, to put it politely, not well received when it released on Feb. 12. First announced in February 2008, it would be fair to say that the five-year wait for Aliens: Colonial Marines ended with one of the more spectacular critical bashings laid on a game since the 2011 release of Duke Nukem Forever. With Gearbox Software’s president Randy Pitchford indicating that Aliens: Colonial Marines will “lose a huge amount of money,” publisher Sega is likely wishing that it had released the other Aliens game it hired Obsidian to develop back in 2006. Even more so now that a leaked gameplay demo shows that Obsidian Entertainment’s Aliens RPG was all but finished when it was canceled in 2009.

Unseen 64 uncovered a 13-minute video of Obsidian’s game, called Aliens Crucible here demonstrating basic play and character creation. The build is said to be from between 2008 and 2009—the above screenshot is date December 2008—shortly before the game was canceled. It features full voice work and shows some of the basic actions player characters can perform such as hacking computers and healing. It all shows some of the character customization tools that are similar to Obsidian’s other Sega RPG from that time, Alpha Protocol, though no special skills or leveling is demonstrated. The game’s environments are less similar to the blue and gray tones of James Cameron’s Aliens and more readily recall Ridley Scott’s Alien and David Fincher’s Alien 3.

Obsidian’s Feargus Urquhart told Joystiq in 2010 that Aliens Crucible was all but complete when Sega pulled the plug. “[If] you had come in and played any of the last builds we were working on, you would have said it was a finished game,” said Urquhart, “That’s how close we were. It looked and felt like it was ready to ship.” Rather than release the game, Sega said it had reassessed “the type of [Aliens] game we want to release” and canceled the game in June 2009.

This isn’t the first time that materials from Aliens Crucible have come out. Concept art produced for the game leaked onto the web in September 2011.

It’s unlikely, but Sega has rescued canceled Aliens projects in the past. Aliens Infestation for Nintendo DS by WayForward was rumored to be canceled around the same time as Obsidian’s RPG but it was ultimately released in October 2011.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Anthony John Agnello
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anthony John Agnello is a writer living in New York. He works as the Community Manager of Joystiq.com and his writing has…
PS5 Pro: news, rumored release date, price, and specs
A PS5 standing on a table, with purple lights around it.

Rumors are running rampant about a supposed PlayStation 5 Pro, or PS5 Pro for short. Just like we got a mid-generation upgrade with the PS4 Pro  during the last console cycle, many people are expecting PlayStation to release an incrementally more powerful machine to bridge the gap between the launch unit and an eventual PlayStation 6. Leaks have been coming out from some fairly credible sources, with a lot of juicy and very specific details about what a hypothetical PS5 Pro could look like. As credible as these sources may be, we do still need to take everything we see with some skepticism until Sony officially confirms that this system even exists. Until then, here are all the rumors out there regarding the PS5 Pro.
Rumored release window

A constant release window that all leaks have pointed to is sometime in Fall of 2024. That's right around the corner, probably in the September through November range, meaning we should be getting an official announcement on the console if that is indeed the plan. It appears that PS5 Pro dev kits are now in the hands of more developers, who have been asked that PS5 Pro-enhanced games be submitted for certification in August. These developments point toward a 2024 release.

Read more
If you grew up playing typing games, you’ll adore Cryptmaster
A floating head looks in a box in Cryptmaster.

Over the past few weeks, I’ve found myself reflecting a lot on the kinds of games I played as a kid growing up in the 1990s. That’s not just for nostalgia’s sake; several new releases this month hark back to that era. Crow Country is a throwback to PlayStation 1 horror games, while Endless Ocean: Luminous almost plays like a big-budget educational game. But nothing has brought me back more than Cryptmaster.

Published by Akupara Games, Cryptmaster is a traditional dungeon crawler with a very untraditional twist: It’s a typing game. If you instantly know what that means, there’s a good chance you’re nursing some mid-30s back pain right now. Games that taught kids how to type on a keyboard had a mainstream moment in the 1990s thanks to high profile games like Mario Teaches Typing.

Read more
Nintendo Switch 2: release date rumors, features we want, and more
Prime Day Nintendo Switch Deals

Rumors of a Nintendo Switch 2 (or Switch Pro) have been circulating for years. Whispers of the next-gen Nintendo console first started when The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom was initially teased in 2019, gained steam when the Switch OLED launched in 2021, and are increasing now that the standard Switch has been out for six years.

There's no doubt that the Nintendo Switch is a fantastic console -- it has a unique and impressive game library (with more upcoming games slated for this year), the number of features included with Nintendo Switch Online is constantly improving, and it's still our favorite portable console -- but it isn't without its flaws. There's enough room for improvement to warrant an entirely new console in the near future. Nintendo recently announced that we wouldn't see a Switch upgrade in the next fiscal year, meaning the absolute earliest we get a look at a new Nintendo console would be in late 2024.

Read more