A long amount of time has passed since the origin of video games, and the medium has since progressed far beyond what any developer could've dreamed of. Back in the old-school days of video gaming, developers even had their own predictions for what the future held for humanity. Some were optimistic, while others showcased grim looks at what awaited humans.

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Now that the 2020s have arrived, against all odds, it'd be wise to take a look back at what video games predicted the decade to look like. These eight games that are now considered "retro" (in this case, pre-2000 titles) tried to imagine their own vision of the 2020s, to varying degrees of accuracy. Nevertheless, they're all still fun to play even if they didn't pan out to be true.

8 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles In Time

Donatello fighting Krang on a hoverboard

Originally released as an arcade game, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time is one of the more beloved video game adaptations of the popular cartoon franchise. The game's plot centers around the reptilian foursome who are sent by Shredder through a time warp, forcing them to fight his army in the past, the present, and the future.

While some levels take the turtles to prehistoric Earth or a pirate ship at sea, one level takes the turtles into the then-future of 2020. The level "Neon Night-Riders" is one of the few surfing levels of the game, also forcing players to fight the iconic TMNT villain Krang. The level resembles a techno futurescape, but hardly predicted 2020 events like the pandemic.

7 Doom

A horde of demons facing a player in Doom
Doom (1993)

Platform(s)
PS4 , Xbox One , Switch , PC , Stadia , PS3 , Xbox 360 , Xbox (Original) , PS1 , Sega Saturn , Super Nintendo Entertainment System , Android , iOS
Released
December 10, 1993
Developer(s)
id Software
Genre(s)
First-Person Shooter

Doom is one of the most iconic and notorious video games in history, released in 1993 for DOS and later seeing re-releases on most platforms. The game centers on a military base on Mars that is overrun with demons from hell, forcing players to violently mow them down. However, the timeline of the game has been subject to debate among fans and creators.

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According to an instruction manual for the SNES iteration of Doom, the game takes place in March 2022. However, this has been contested by game designer John Romero, who insists that Doom takes place outside of time. Nevertheless, given recent advancements towards colonizing Mars, the future Doom predicts may not be much further than 2022.

6 Perfect Dark

Joanna Dark holding a gun on a rooftop

Originally released for the Nintendo 64 in 2000, Perfect Dark was developed by Rare as a spiritual successor to their hit game GoldenEye 007. However, the original story centers on Joanna Dark, a secret agent operating in 2023 during an intergalactic alien war. Like the game's depiction of the current year, Perfect Dark was quite ahead of its time.

The game also received a GameBoy Color port, though this iteration differs by being set in 2022 instead. Funnily enough, Perfect Dark didn't receive a sequel until Perfect Dark Zero on the Xbox 360, though this game serves as a prequel to the original, taking place in 2020. However, most fans agree that the original is the superior game in the franchise.

5 Captain Commando

Commando shocking enemies on a sidewalk

This 1991 Capcom game was originally released on arcade machines before making its way to the SNES and PlayStation by the end of the '90s. It centers on the titular character, a crime-fighting superhero operating in Metro City in 2026. In this crime-ridden world, Captain Commando is the only one who can save it from powerful Super Criminals.

Though the game is set 35 years after it was initially released, its image of the future wasn't incredibly far from the truth. Though criminals in the 2020s aren't super-powered and all over the place as the game suggests, many of the game's levels are set in urban environments that are close to what people were familiar with back in 1991.

4 Metal Slug

Marco firing missiles at tanks in a field
Metal Slug

Platform(s)
PlayStation (Original) , Neo Geo , Sega Saturn
Released
April 19, 1996
Publisher(s)
SNK
Genre(s)
Action

Metal Slug takes after run-and-gun predecessors like Contra and Gunforce, originally designed for arcade machines in 1996. It later saw ports to the Neo Geo AES, the original PlayStation, and the Sega Saturn, and sparked an entire franchise that continued into the late 2000s. Unlike similar games, Metal Slug was deeply entrenched in sci-fi futurism.

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The game's story takes place in 2028, centering on a war where the titular tanks are sought for control. Players progress through levels as a soldier in command of one of these tanks, as they navigate battlegrounds in the near future. The world in the 2020s is obviously not as war-stricken as Metal Slug depicts it, but it remains mostly faithful to how things are today.

3 Verne World

Players entering Verne World in an overworld

This 1995 game never saw a release in western markets, only released for the Super Famicom. That's quite surprising considering it takes inspiration from the works of French writer Jules Verne, the author of Journey to the Center of the Earth. The game centers around a theme park dedicated to Verne's books, which players become trapped inside.

This is quite the odd video game, considering its outlandish premise. It'd be hard to argue for a Jules Verne-themed amusement park in today's age, let alone the game's canon year of 2028. However, its enemies mostly consisting of lifelike animatronics probably remain accurate as to how scary some advancements in technology can become these days.

2 S.C.A.T.: Special Cybernetic Attack Team

SCAT soldiers firing at flying soldiers

S.C.A.T.: Special Cybernetic Attack Team released for the Famicom in 1990 before seeing ports on the NES the following year. Set in 2029, the game centers on the titular army of cyborg soldiers defending New York City from alien invaders. The sidescrolling shoot-em-up, or "shmup" finds players controlling these soldiers as they battle alien ships from up high.

While no alien invasions have plagued Earth yet in the 2020s, one aspect of the future the game does get right is its inclusivity. When beginning the game, players have the option to control either male or female soldiers. The inclusion of women into the S.C.A.T. army is something that would definitely fit right in with the social norms of the real 2020s.

1 Shadow Of The Ninja

A purple ninja standing in a factory

Also set in 2029, Shadow of the Ninja centers on a pair of ninjas tasked with assassinating a cruel emperor who has taken over America. The game's levels take place in a futuristic New York City, which in this alternate history has been run over in the emperor's conquest. Players start in a harbor and progress through sewers and a factory in the city.

Originally released in 1990 for the Famicom and later ported to the NES, Shadow of the Ninja offers a grim look at the end of the 2020s, overwrought with worldwide war and violence. Hopefully, the next few years don't turn out like Shadow of the Ninja suggests they might, though it still makes for a fun game to play on Nintendo Switch Online.

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