▲
1
▼
The earliest known mention of the mythical video game Polybius was an article on the otherwise legitimate arcade gaming fan site Coinop.org posted on August 3, 1998.
The article was edited on May 16, 2009, after the "game" had achieved viral popularity, to inform readers that the site hosts had received new information about the game and were flying to Kyiv, Ukraine to investigate the title, which they would update the page on when they found out. No news has been recorded on Polybius since, but the website would have new games added to its database up to 2021.
Kurt Koller, the webmaster for coinop.org, would later claim in 2021 that he planned to go to Kyiv in 2009 to see Chernobyl, but his friend from Ukraine refused because he was expecting a child, meaning that the "Polybius update" may have just been an in-joke related to this visit.
The article was edited on May 16, 2009, after the "game" had achieved viral popularity, to inform readers that the site hosts had received new information about the game and were flying to Kyiv, Ukraine to investigate the title, which they would update the page on when they found out. No news has been recorded on Polybius since, but the website would have new games added to its database up to 2021.
Kurt Koller, the webmaster for coinop.org, would later claim in 2021 that he planned to go to Kyiv in 2009 to see Chernobyl, but his friend from Ukraine refused because he was expecting a child, meaning that the "Polybius update" may have just been an in-joke related to this visit.
Coin-Op article on Polybius:
https://www.coinop.org/Game/103223/Polybius
Koller's Ukraine Tweet:
https://twitter.com/InsidiousForce/status/1391675104799510531
https://www.coinop.org/Game/103223/Polybius
Koller's Ukraine Tweet:
https://twitter.com/InsidiousForce/status/1391675104799510531
subdirectory_arrow_right Cube Quest (Game)
▲
3
▼
Video game researcher Patrick Kellogg posited that Cube Quest was likely the inspiration for Polybius, an urban legend in which US government operatives create a Tempest-esque shoot-em-up of the same name that has lasting psychoactive effects on those who play it. In Kellogg's analysis, he notes that Cube Quest features similar Tempest-style gameplay and sports vibrant, surreal backgrounds like the kind described in the urban legend. The backgrounds in Cube Quest were reproduced by running a LaserDisc player installed in the game's cabinet; because LaserDisc technology is much less reliable than solid state media, the cabinet required constant maintenance from technicians, which Kellogg cited as the likely inspiration for the government agents who periodically harvest data from Polybius in the urban legend.
Related Games
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Arcade Game
Tapper
Super Dragon Ball Z
Pop'n Music: Usagi to Neko to Shounen no Yume
Dance Dance Revolution 3rdMix
Dance Dance Revolution 4thMix
Street Fighter II Turbo: Hyper Fighting
Centipede
KiKi KaiKai
Wild Gunman
Tekken 3
Arm Wrestling
The Simpsons Arcade Game
Dancing Stage EuroMix 2
Red Earth
Metal Slug 5
Street Fighter: The Movie
Track & Field
RoboCop 2
Defender
Tennis
Mega Man 2: The Power Fighters
Ridge Racer
New Rally-X
Vs. Ice Climber
Golf
Dance Dance Revolution Supernova 2
Mechanized Attack
P-47: The Phantom Fighter
Pac & Pal
Altered Beast
Sound Voltex: Exceed Gear
Head On
Offroad Thunder
Mighty Bomb Jack
Tank
The Fast and The Furious
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Heritage for the Future
Street Fighter
Splatterhouse
Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000
Ninja Gaiden III: The Ancient Ship of Doom
Fatal Fury 2
Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge
Dance Dance Revolution X3 VS 2ndMix
Time Pilot
Crossbow
Strider 2
Super Locomotive
Magical Tetris Challenge