Adventure Cdi - Sonic
It is terrible. It is broken. It is, without question, the greatest Sonic game never made.
In a way, Sonic Adventure Cdi is the purest expression of the Sonic ethos: speed, attitude, and a complete disregard for the laws of physics. It just… forgot to make it fun. It forgot to make it work. It forgot to make it exist .
This is the story of the game that wasn't. The game that shouldn't be. The game that redefines the word "unplayable." To understand Sonic Adventure Cdi , you must first understand the Phillips CD-i. Launched in 1991, it was a multimedia “player” that also played games, boasting a staggering 1MB of RAM and a green-book CD format that could store full-motion video. In practice, it was a catastrophe. Its processor was sluggish. Its controller was an ergonomic war crime (a plastic slab with a click-wheel and a number pad). And its development tools were, by all accounts, a form of psychological torture. Sonic Adventure Cdi
Sonic was going to the devil. The developer assigned to the project was a small Dutch studio named Phantasm Software , known only for a forgotten golf game and an interactive encyclopedia of mollusks. Led by a manic, chain-smoking programmer named Henrik Van Der Berg, the team was given eight months, a budget of $150,000, and a single design document: “Make it like Mario 64, but on CD-i.”
To save costs, Phantasm outsourced character animation to a small studio in Bratislava that had previously only made a stop-motion toothpaste commercial. The animators were given a single reference sheet: the Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog cartoon, paused on a frame where Sonic is screaming. It is terrible
And yet, here it is. Running at 12 frames per second. The saxophone sample looping. Barry the cab driver sighing, “Gotta… go… ugh, do I have to?”
What nobody knew—what was buried in a contract addendum no one read—was that the license also included a single, non-exclusive option for Sega’s mascot. Sega, deep in the throes of the Saturn’s disastrous launch and terrified of Sony, sold the CD-i rights for a pittance. The check cleared. The deal was done. In a way, Sonic Adventure Cdi is the
The result is… something else. Sonic’s model is a 3D-rendered abomination—eyes too wide, quills that clip through his own torso, a mouth that animates independently of his face. When he spins, he doesn’t curl into a ball. Instead, his limbs snap to his sides like a man falling down an elevator shaft, and he rotates around his own spine. The spin-dash takes 4.7 seconds to charge. Testers reported nausea.


