An Unreleased NES Game from 1989 Featuring WCW Wrestlers Has Been Discovered

We don’t normally keep you up-to-date with every cool bit of retro gaming news here at Paste, but last night a story broke that lands squarely within two different passions of mine. I’m talking, of course, about 1980s Southern wrestling, and particularly that weird window of time after Ted Turner bought Jim Crockett Promotions but before the term World Championship Wrestling (WCW) had come to replace the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) as the name the company was largely known as; and the Nintendo Entertainment System, aka the NES, Nintendo’s 8-bit console that almost single-handedly revived the videogame industry in America in the second half of the ‘80s.
Last night game collector and YouTuber Stephan “Archon 1981” Reese posted a video about a previously unknown NES game that he bought from a former Nintendo employee who tested the game as part of its certification process in 1989. The game didn’t just go unreleased—it was never even announced. It was simply unheard of, even by the most serious game historians and archivists, until Reese bought the test cartridge from that employee.
This would be a fascinating footnote regardless of what was on the cartridge, but it gets a lot more interesting for fans of NWA/WCW and wrestling games. On the title screen (which you can see in the video below, along with footage of the game in action) the game is called UWC, with a 1989 copyright and the logo of its developer, the now-shuttered Japanese company SETA. After the player picks between a single-player or two-player game, and decides which of three match types to play (singles, tag team or “elimination series”), they find a character select screen with eight of the top late ‘80s stars from Jim Crockett Promotions / WCW.
A handful of them should be immediately recognizable to any wrestling fan. In the top row you can see the Road Warriors—the tag team of Animal and Hawk—as well as Sting, who was quickly becoming the promotion’s top face the year this game was copyrighted. The bottom row is a little harder to figure out, as three of them are just a bunch of grimacing or grinning blond guys, but that’s unmistakably Ric Flair second from right.
Reese’s footage helps identify some of the other wrestlers. The bottom left corner is none other than Beautiful Bobby Eaton, one-half of the Midnight Express, perhaps the greatest tag team of all time. The top right slot looks a lot like Jimmy Garvin, and that’s because it is, as we see in the very first in-game footage from Reese’s video. Garvin’s wrestling Barry Windham in that footage, so we can scratch another one of those bottom row guys off.