I am lazy. Very lazy. I scanned one of the Sonic AWP fliers, but I have to rescan it because I am not satisfied with the scan's quality.
The first public showing of Sonic the Hedgehog 2 was Summer CES 1992 (28-31 May). The Nick Arcade prototype. The second public showing was apparently the 1992 Tokyo Toy Show (4-7 June): https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File:Famitsu_JP_0184.pdf&page=8 The same build. How do I know? Because that off-camera photo lines up with the demo. In the Simon Wai prototype, the 2-player demo is garbage because even though the layout has changed, the inputs are based on the Nick Arcade prototype, so Tails never gets here. So +1 to the possible sources of our dump.
New Sonic CD info from Mazin! The Metal Sonic projectors are a remnant from an earlier plot in which the animals confused Sonic for an enemy and attacked him. The unused samples were meant to loop the music. It was too difficult to get the timing down, so they just left the music unlooped.
Joe, any chance you could directly link to those relevant tweets? Having trouble finding them, especially through Google Translate.
Here's the Metal Sonic projector one. Having a bit of trouble finding the other one but I'll update this post as soon as I find it.
The tweet about the projectors had been posted last year, but I don't think the confirmation about the looping samples was ever posted. They were long theorized to serve that purpose of course, but confirmation is always nice, as is official word on why they were scrapped.
I think this is Mazin's tweet on the SNCBNK files. This may be of value, too, but the replies are detached here...
Hmm, so they did try to fill the gap between loops but with different, longer patches than what's in the SNCBNKs?
I translated four pages from that Tokyo International Forum booklet for Sonic Adventure. Scott managed to sort of scan the thing in a way that made it possible for me to stitch the pages mostly seamlessly. I don't know if I'll do the whole booklet, but those particular pages are the highlights, I think.
There's interesting stuff in there like Station Square and Emerald Coast being a recreation of CancĂșn's tourist area, with this being the hotel that inspired the Station Square one (In fact the chairs are set up the same way in the autodemo). Also Sonic going back to his roots again
So it actually got stated at one point in time that the Classic to Modern change was mainly aesthetic for the sake of a new era. And those CG images of Chaos attacking a police car...
Sonic Retro before Sonic Retro: New Zealand Edition: Sega Action (New Zealand) Sonic 2 time travel! Neo Green Hill Zone! Neo Green Hill Zone? Sorry, prototype. Here's "the mysterious Dust Hill Zone". Dust Hill Zone? Sorry, Sonic CD. Here's "the real mysterious Dust Hill Zone".
Hmm, so the sonic rush proto is incredibly undocumented everywhere. I'm certainly not the one to fix everything up, but I noticed a few things. >Sonic's animation for looking up matches the one from advance 3. It's obvious to see why. Dunno why they changed it though, imo it's better than the final. >Sonic's animations for doing tricks are different. I really have no way to describe them, but I compared, and they are unique. >Air dash and homing attack are mapped to jump like older games, and not R. This one caught me by surprise lol. >I have no way to confirm this, but springs and boost don't mix too well. I noticed sonic's speed would suddenly snap and launch him a good bit, but on one occasion he literally went flying across the stage outrunning the camera. I couldn't replicate it. >Sonic's up+R trick doesn't cancel your horizontal momentum. I missed several jumps because sonic kept flying forward when I thought he was gonna stop. Also, I have two extra tidbits here that carried over into the final that I never noticed before until I screwed around a bit. >Boosting apparently negates spike damage. Who knew? >Just like in Advance 1 and 2, you can jump at the very tip of the rail for extra height. Sparkles come off of Sonic and the rainbow ring sound plays. I can honestly imagine how this has apparently flown under the radar for so long. Who (besides me) is gonna think to stop and try this? :D
Double post :p Installing Sonic Crackers on a 3ds as a virtual console title fixes all the crash bugs from console. Good to know.