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🚨🎮 SCP Fan Film, X-Men Arcade Comeback, And Co-Op Chaos

Last week’s top clips dove into fan passion and indie creativity, from a crowdfunded SCP animated film, to the long-awaited return of X-Men Arcade, to a chaotic co-op stealth game.

Sometimes the biggest buzz doesn’t come from blockbuster studios — it comes from communities. Fans, indie teams, and retro revivals can generate just as much excitement as any AAA release.

This week’s Cliptastic standouts show that energy in full force: a beloved internet mythos jumping into animation, a classic arcade experience resurfacing decades later, and indie developers turning absurd ideas into multiplayer chaos.

🥇 FIRST PLACE

SCP: Gallionic Turns Internet Horror Into Animation

Views: 26,090

A fan team has launched a Kickstarter for SCP: Gallionic, a 20-minute animated short based on the collaborative horror universe of the SCP Foundation.

The project follows two siblings trapped during a catastrophic containment breach — a premise that leans heavily into the SCP universe’s signature blend of cosmic horror and institutional secrecy. After two years of development, the creators are now turning to crowdfunding to bring the animation to life.

Fan-driven projects like this highlight the unusual strength of the SCP community. Because the universe was built collaboratively online, adaptations often emerge organically from creators who grew up inside the lore.

X-Men Arcade Returns After 34 Years

Views: 19,200

@cliptastic365

X-Men Arcade Classic Returns After 34 Years 13 classic Marvel games, with rollback netcode and six-player co-op. #Marvel #XMen #RetroGamin... See more

One of the most beloved arcade beat-’em-ups is returning. The classic X‑Men Arcade is part of a new Marvel retro collection featuring 13 games.

The update brings modern upgrades like rollback netcode and six-player online co-op — preserving the chaotic team battles that defined the original cabinets while making them playable in today’s online environment.

For longtime fans, the appeal isn’t just nostalgia. It’s the chance to relive a uniquely social gaming experience that once required an entire row of arcade machines.

🥉 THIRD PLACE

We Are So Cooked Turns Stealth Into Multiplayer Disaster

Views: 15,489

We Are So Cooked flips stealth gameplay into cooperative slapstick. Up to four players must hide a body while navigating civilians, guards, and even tracking dogs.

Drag the body alone and you leave a blood trail. Carry it together and you move faster — unless someone drops it. The physics-driven mechanics turn small mistakes into escalating chaos.

Still in development for PC, the game leans into the unpredictability of co-op systems, where teamwork can quickly collapse into panic and laughter.

Got a friend who would want to stay ahead of all things pop culture? Share this to them!

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Resident Evil Fans Tried Calling Leon

Views: 12,300

@cliptastic365

Resident Evil Fans Tried Calling Leon Resident Evil Requiem shows Leon’s phone number in-game — fans called it, but it’s just a classic 55... See more

Players noticed that Leon S. Kennedy’s phone number appears in Resident Evil Requiem. Naturally, fans tried dialing it.

The number turned out to be a standard “555” placeholder used in film and games to avoid real-world calls. Even so, the moment highlights how quickly fandoms turn tiny details into viral experiments.

Nintendo’s Mini Game Boy Music Player

Views: 4,743

@cliptastic365

Nintendo Just Released a Mini Game Boy Music Player Nintendo’s $69.99 Mini Game Boy jukebox plays 45 tracks from Pokémon Red & Blue. Each ... See more

Nintendo released a $69.99 Mini Game Boy jukebox that plays 45 tracks from Pokémon Red and Blue.

Each miniature cartridge contains a different song from the soundtrack. The nostalgic design taps directly into Game Boy aesthetics — though fans quickly noticed one surprising omission: there’s no headphone jack.

Steel Artery Builds a City on a Train

Views: 3,965

Steel Artery is a steampunk colony simulator where your entire settlement sits atop a massive moving locomotive.

Developed by solo creator SoulAge23, the game blends city-building mechanics with the constant movement of a train traveling through a dangerous world. A free demo is already available on Steam ahead of the planned 2026 launch.

This week’s Cliptastic stories underline how entertainment ecosystems evolve beyond studios alone. Fans fund their own adaptations, indie developers push unusual concepts, and classic games find new life decades later.

The result is a media landscape where creativity often comes from the edges — and where communities help decide what survives, returns, or transforms next.

The world should be talking about you, too!

Got an interesting story to share, an idea you want to introduce, or a product you want to showcase? We can make a video out of it!

Sincerely yours,

Chris Madden
CEO and Founder
Cliptastic