Screenshots and broadcasts of StarCraft: Ghost – Blizzard Entertainment's brutal attempts to crack the ad market at the beginning of this century – faced an unexpected turn this morning. Goods appear valid even though their appearance is unknown.
The video above is one of three received and shared on social media and forums this morning. At 720p it was taken for the first 7 minutes of the game. StarCraft: Ghost it should have been a third-person action game from Blizzard's RTS. It was announced at the Tokyo Games Show in 2002, it was declared "out of place" in 2006, and in 2014 Blizzard founder Mike Morhaime confirmed it was canceled.
Another video, from YouTube user Lorez Meneses (first tested by Kotaku) shows StarCraft: Ghost running on the Xbox 360 modded. Menenes says it was paid online by "some guy who found the item in the dock."
Then ResetEra users see this video, uploaded in early January, of three minutes of streaming from StarCraft: Ghost to build. The uploaded username is the same as the folder in the Leerz Meneses video.
The leak looks like it was first seen on social media when Andrew Borman, of The Strong National Museum of Play, posted four screenshots on Twitter.
Borman, conservationist for The Strong video games, he said quickly he had nothing to do with the leak and that it was not part of his job, but he observed that the building “sent anonymously to various Xbox groups.”
StarCraft: Ghost it was announced at the Tokyo Game Show in September 2002 and was for Nintendo GameCube, PlayStation 2 and Xbox. Nihilistic software was first developed by Blizzard Entertainment; Blizzard then added another studio he had bought, Swinging & # 39; Ape Studios, in charge.
Video from StarCraft: Ghost it has been to the wild before, so this is not a new discovery – although the 720p video above gives it a completely clean look so far what the Nihilistic have in mind.