As spotted by our mates at RPS fanzine PC Gamer, Petersen - one of the four level designers on the original Quake - has been tweeting out some interesting tidbits regarding that game’s development lately. It’s no secret that Quake had a somewhat tortured production, and the pair attempted to fill some gaps with their own monstrosities. McGee, for his part, had been working on an object scaler, and decided to test it out with a colossal undead bloke. The level would’ve had you nipping around its body, poking and prodding it like a heavily armed ant. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings — Sandy Petersen (@SandyofCthulhu) October 11, 2020 Petersen’s, on the other hand, involved a scaled-up Vore that would’ve chased you throughout the level, a la the Alien in Alien: Isolation. Instead, the final chapter of Episode 2 features just one of these, regular-sized and all. Bit rubbish, that. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings — Sandy Petersen (@SandyofCthulhu) October 11, 2020 As Petersen explains, these were cheaper workarounds to try and fit some interesting endings into Quake’s middle episodes. “Fans of old Quake may note that episodes 2 & 3 lack boss monsters,” Petersen later mentioned. “McGee’s giant zombie and my own super-vore were tries to fill the gap”. Both seem to have been scrapped for similar reasons, too, in that giant scaled-up versions of smaller enemy models actually looked a bit rubbish. Oh, well. Quake might still be an all-timer of an FPS, but we’ll just have to imagine the alternate universe where QuakeGuy becomes the lead in a bloody reboot of The Borrowers. Besides. If Id won’t let us take on giant undead men, at least the modding community will let me fight a massive dog with a shotgun.