If you're not reaching, engaging, and monetizing customers on mobile, you're likely losing them to someone else. Register now for the 8th annual MobileBeat, July 13-14, where the best and brightest will be exploring the latest strategies and tactics in the mobile space.

Long before Sony and Nintendo were rivals, the two companies were partners for a brief time. In 1998 the duo started work on SNES-CD, a video game media format that was supposed to augment the cartridge-based SNES by adding support for higher-capacity CDs. In 1991 at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Sony introduced the "Play Station" (yes, with a space) but it never saw the light of day.

Now, more than two decades later, Imgur user DanDiebold has uploaded images of the unreleased console. This particular model (about 200 Play Station prototypes were created) confirms that the system was supposed to be compatible with existing SNES titles as well as titles to be released in the SNES-CD format. In other words, it would have been the world's first hybrid console: game developers and gamers alike would be able to use both SNES cartridges and CDs.

Without further ado, here is the front:

HvBKn1x

The back:

laaXzFe

And the controller:

gboKXrt

If you're curious how the partnership ended, the short answer is that it came down to licensing disagreements. The long story is a lot more controversial.

Nintendo president Hiroshi Yamauchi didn't want Sony to control the SNES-CD format. As a result, Nintendo formed a partnership with Dutch electronics firm Philips, a particularly bold move as it meant abandoning a fellow Japanese company for a European one.

A day after Sony announced its SNES-compatible "Play Station" at CES, Nintendo made the surprise announcement: a partnership with Philips to produce an SNES-CD add-on for the SNES. It was a massive blow to Sony, but in the end it proved more problematic for Nintendo.

Sony continued development of its own console and released the PlayStation in 1994. Nintendo did not release a CD-based console until 2001, when it launched the GameCube. The rest, as they say, is history.

If you want to learn more about this particular prototype, check out the following thread on Assembler Games. DanDiebold is offering details about the unit itself and how it came into his possession. He wrote: "My dad worked for a company, apparently one of the guys he used to work with, I think his name was Olaf, used to work at Nintendo and when my dads company went bankrupt, my dad found it in a box of 'junk' he was supposed to throw out."

DanDiebold says he will try to find the power supply and turn the prototype on.

Sony is a Japanese multinational conglomerate corporation headquartered in Kōnan, Minato, Tokyo, Japan. Sony Corporation is the electronics business unit and the parent company of the Sony Group, which is engaged in business through i… read more »

Nintendo of America is consistently amazed and humbled by the passion and loyalty of our fans. Our hope is that this Page can be a place where that excitement can live, thrive and be shared. And while we love your creativity and are he… read more »

Powered by VBProfiles