The VGHF built an archive of gaming history — and is making it available online
by Ash Parrish from The Verge - All Posts on (#6JY50)
Collage by Cath Virginia / The Verge | Photos from Getty Images
Super Sushi Pinball, a game that does not prominently feature sushi, never actually launched. It was meant to be Sony's second game in the US, intended for the NES during a time when such news would not have melted the brains of console diehards, and was marketed in video game magazines for over a year. This is a game that was last seen by anyone in 1990 at a trade show," said Frank Cifaldi, founder of the Video Game History Foundation. It just disappeared from the world."
That is until Cifaldi found it in the basement of Ed Semrad, retired editor-in-chief of Electronic Gaming Monthly. One day, when I was planning a trip to Chicago, I just kind of shot my shot and ... he invited me to his basement," Cifaldi said. In that basement,...