Nintendo and Sony made a hybrid game console 2 decades ago no one has ever seen - until now
Sony had yet to introduce its now-famous "PlayStation" line of game consoles. Nintendo was looking to expand its wildly popular, but flagging, Super Nintendo console with a CD-ROM drive.
At the time - the late 1980s and early 1990s - Nintendo was facing increasingly serious competition from the likes of Sega and its "Genesis" console. Worse: it was rumored that Sega had a CD-ROM add-on planned for the Genesis. Sony, meanwhile, was looking to get more serious about the video game business, having developed a piece of the Super Nintendo's internals and seen a strong return on investment.
And thus, the "Nintendo PlayStation" was born.
Er, maybe that would be the end of that story had the deal between Sony and Nintendo not fallen apart.
In the end, around 200 prototype units of the Super Nintendo / PlayStation were created and subsequently destroyed. Sadly, the device has never shown up on eBay (or Antiques Roadshow)...
Until this past weekend! Behold, the "Nintendo PlayStation":
Reddit user Dan Diebold found this in his father's attic. Sounds too good to be true, right? Ridiculous, even.
That it is, but the explanation is shockingly pedestrian.
Diebold's father, Terry Diebold, reportedly worked at Advanta Corporation - a now defunct banking company - in the early 2000s, under the leadership of president Olaf Olafsson. That last name is important: Olafsson was the former president of Sony Interactive Entertainment, the group that became Sony's PlayStation arm. Olafsson had brokered the deal with Nintendo back in the late '80s, as well as the deal with Sega in the early '90s.
Olafsson is exactly the kind of guy who might have an extra prototype of the "Nintendo PlayStation" hybrid console.
When Advanta went out of business in 2009, Terry Diebold was tasked with disposing of a variety of company resources. In one box, Terry Diebold supposedly found the prototype seen in the pictures here, subsequently posted to Reddit by his son, Dan Diebold.
Dan even made this video of himself over the weekend, showing off the device and its Super Nintendo-like controller: