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  • Polybius

    Polybius is a supposed arcade game featured in an Internet urban legend. According to the story, the Tempest-style game was released to the public in 1981, and caused its players to go insane, causing them to suffer from intense stress and horrific nightmares. A short time after its release, it supposedly disappeared without a trace. No evidence for the existence of a game has ever been discovered.

    According to the story, an unheard-of new arcade game appeared in several suburbs of Portland, Oregon in 1981, something of a rarity at the time. The game, Polybius, proved to be incredibly popular, to the point of addiction, and lines formed around the machines, quickly followed by clusters of visits from men in black. Rather than the usual marketing data collected by company visitors to arcade machines, they collected some unknown data, allegedly testing responses to the psychoactive machines. The players themselves suffered from a series of unpleasant side-effects, including amnesia, insomnia, nightmares, night terrors, and even suicide in some versions of the legend. Some players stopped playing video games, while it is reported that one became an anti-gaming activist. The supposed creator of Polybius is Ed Rottberg, and the company named in the urban legend is Sinneslöschen (German for sense-delete), often named as either a secret government organization or a codename for Atari. The gameplay is said to be similar to Tempest, a shoot 'em up game utilizing vector graphics.
    The origin of the legend is unknown. Some think it originated as a usenethoax by a curious character named Cyberyogi, whose real name is Christian Oliver Windler. Others believe the story is a true urban legend – one that grew out of exaggerated and distorted tales of an early release version of Tempest that caused problems with photosensitive epilepsy; the game was reported to have caused motion sickness and vertigo, and was therefore pulled.
    Several people had claimed to have a ROM of the game, but none of them have made this ROM available for public scrutiny, a "lack of hard evidence" situation typical of hoaxes and conspiracy theories. Conflicting information is even circulated regarding the style or genre of the game. Some sources claim it is a maze-style game while others describe it as an action space-fighter.
    The Polybius legend received some mass-market attention in the September 2003 issue of GamePro magazine, as part of a feature story on video game urban legends called "Secrets and Lies." The magazine determined the legend to be neither true nor false, but "inconclusive."Snopes.com has apparently debunked the myth as a modern day version of 1980's rumors of "Men in Black" visiting arcades and taking down the names of high scorers at arcade games. However, Snopes.com has apparently debunked the myth as a modern day version of 1980's rumors of "Men in Black" visiting arcades and taking down the names of high scorers at arcade games.

    Now, I don't really believe in anything of this. But the "remake" out there is really a good game.

    The game "remake" can be downloaded from here:
    http://www.sinnesloschen.com/1.php

    Also there is more information.

    And here some more:
    http://www.joltcountry.com/polybius.html

    Info was token from wikipedia.
    Last edited by VisitntX; 07-05-2008, 09:42:40 PM.
    "Dizzy my future, silly my way."
    "Under my flag I live free."

  • #2
    Heh, interesting. So I'm guessing the idea in the urban legend is that there were subliminal messages and imagery in the game...
    I may be lazy, but I can...zzzZZZzzzZZZzzzZZZ...

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    • #3
      Also Men In Black taking notes for strange things, the lost of memory, the addiction and then hate against the videogame. To say the truth, probably the game never existed, but who can prove one or other thing. There are lot of prototypes that companies lost and we will never see again. In one of the activision classic, there are some notes about some protos recovered that they don't know what are, and those were in the garbage practically.
      There is even one saying that you could hear cries, see ghosts. It's unbelieaveble the huge amount of myhts rounding this so called game.
      But the "remake" it's quite good to play.
      "Dizzy my future, silly my way."
      "Under my flag I live free."

      Comment


      • #4
        I've heard of this one before. Sucks there's no evidence of it being a real game or not.

        The remake is rather an odd game... Can't quite make any sense of it.

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