Summary

A former artist who worked at Sega revealed a concept sketch for an unused character fromSonic Adventure’s development.Sonic Adventurewas the defining game that many fans think of in terms of the series leaping into 3D, along with it being one of theSega Dreamcast’s strongest titles. However,Sonic Adventurewasn’t the first time that the franchise attempted a 3D platforming game, as there’s a tumultuous history behind the game that many may not know about.

BeforeSonic Adventurewas brought over to the Dreamcast, the project had started off onthe ill-fated Sega Saturn. When it failed to materialize on the failing console, a lot of its work was scrapped so Sega could focus on the Dreamcast.Sonic Jamwould become the closest to the Sega Saturn getting a 3D platforming adventure, though it was more of an interactive 3D hub world than an actual game. BothSonic JamandSonic Adventureshared an artist, Satoshi Okano, who later left Sega in 2006. Almost over twenty-five years after the original release ofSonic Adventure, Okano shared some new details regarding a character that went unused during its development.

Sonic Adventure Tag Page Cover Art

This detail was first revealed on Okano’s Twitter back in 2020, where he was originally asked about a set of textures that can be seen on one ofSonic Adventure’s levels, Speed Highway. In this level, there is a poster of a girl that appears to be wearing a bikini, with many unsure of who she was for the longest time. ArcadeMegamix asked Okano, since he wasAdventure’s field artist, to which Okano replied that she was a “character of the planned spider” who ultimately went unused from the game. A few years later, when someone asked if there was any surviving concept art of this scrapped character, Okano was happy to post a full-body concept sketch on Twitter.

According to this full-body sketch of this scrappedSonic Adventurecharacter, she was known as “Spider-Girl,” likely a prototype name, before finalizing a design. True to her name, she is modeled after a spider, possessing multiple arms and wearing something similar to a web-like dress. She also appears to have the ability to create webs, which she forms into a heart.

Despite the character going unused and only existing as a hard-to-find part of the game, many were impressed with the character’s rough design. Interestingly enough, Rouge the Bat,a supporting character introduced inSonic Adventure 2, shares some elements with “Spider-Girl.” The biggest connective tissue would be the hearts, as Rouge’s design has a heart on her suit and boots. Not only that, but Rouge and Spider-Girl both appear to be designed as femme fatale-like characters, based on the sketch and Rouge’s role in the games. Nevertheless, many fans were interested in unearthing another part ofSonic Adventure’s troubled development.