Gaming News “Future Warfare”, the discontinued SF Call of Duty video game, shows off gameplay videos for the first time…
Images of a canceled futuristic Call of Duty have surfaced online. We can discover a title in advanced development, with a game sequence in space.
Images from Future Warfare
Images of a canceled Call of Duty game were recently shared on Twitter/X. This work, codenamed NX1, which should have been called Future Warfare, was originally intended to be the first truly futuristic work of the most famous FPS saga. A leap into the future where armed conflict has finally landed on the moon. And that is exactly what we discover with these images that show in detail one of the missions of this aborted project. Here we find all the license codes as well as never-before-used new features such as the implementation of lunar gravity and firearms specific to this environment.
The first futuristic Call of Duty
In the comments section of the post, industry veteran Brian Bright, who worked on the project, revealed some details about this game. We learn that development began shortly after the Infinity Ward studio “implosion” in the early 2010s. This project was supposed to be carried out by Neversoft, which was eventually developed Call of Duty Ghosts
As Brian Bright explains, the studio tried some low-gravity experiments and wanted to get familiar with the game’s engine, while Neversoft previously worked on the Guitar Hero license using the engine from the Tony Hawk Pro Skater games. We also learned that Neversoft had begun work on the title’s multiplayer, specifically designing the first Escort mode for the license. In the end, the studio would have completed “two or three missions” before abandoning the project.
In 2010, Activision registered the names Future Warfare, Space Warfare, Secret Warfare and Advanced Warfare. Future Warfare should have marked the franchise’s first real-time leap, but in the end it did Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare who looked into it in 2014 and suggested a campaign in 2054.