Juego Fighting Force -ntsc-u- -slus-00433- ✦
Data-miners later decoded the audio. The Echoes whispered phrases from a scrapped storyline: "You killed the wrong scientist." "This simulation has no end." "SLUS-00433 remembers."
In late 1997, just months before Eidos Interactive would publish Fighting Force on the PlayStation, a small internal team at Core Design—tasked with a controversial port of the arcade-style brawler—created a regional test build. This was not the final European or North American release. This was , a forgotten NTSC-U prototype internally code-named Juego (Spanish for "game"). Juego Fighting Force -NTSC-U- -SLUS-00433-
"You weren't supposed to see this. The contract says we can't release a game where the villains win. But in SLUS-00433, they do. Always have. The final build you bought in stores? That's the lie. This is the truth." Data-miners later decoded the audio
When players first booted Juego Fighting Force - NTSC-U - SLUS-00433 , they noticed it wasn't the same game. The iconic "Eidos" intro was replaced by a crude, glitching white text on black: This was , a forgotten NTSC-U prototype internally
Players quickly discovered the first major secret: pressing on the title screen unlocked "Kai's Revenge Mode."
The menu music was a dissonant, slowed-down version of the final game's theme. Selecting a character—Hawk, Mace, Smasher, or Alana—did not start the bank heist level. Instead, a hidden debug terminal appeared, demanding a "Sequence Code."
Today, is considered a "cursed" SKU among collectors. Only seven verified rips exist. Emulators cannot run it correctly—it desyncs audio, corrupts textures, and occasionally causes the host PC to crash with a "Memory cannot be 'read'" error.