1666: Amsterdam Finally Resurfaces After 15-Year Development Saga

Key Takeaways

- 1666: Amsterdam has a free playable 30-minute prologue available now on Steam and Epic Games Store
- The game spans three time periods: 1666 (80% of gameplay), 1999 (15%), and present day (5%)
- Players control a cat who is actually a man from 1999, a mechanic Désilets calls 'the missing piece of the puzzle'
A 15-Year Journey Finally Reaches Players
At IGN Live 2026, Patrice Désilets walked onto the stage to discuss a game that many thought would never exist. 1666: Amsterdam, his supernatural action-adventure set in 17th-century Netherlands, has spent over 15 years in development limbo. It passed through multiple studios, survived a legal battle with Ubisoft, and emerged as one of gaming's most legendary vaporware projects.
Now it's real. A 30-minute playable prologue launched alongside the IGN Live presentation, available for free on Steam and Epic Games Store. Désilets, the director behind Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, Assassin's Creed 1 and 2, and Ancestors: The Humankind Odyssey, finally has his passion project back.
“When you have an idea and you feel there's something to it, you have to stick with it. That's how I am.”
— Patrice Désilets, Creator of 1666: Amsterdam
Three Timelines, One Story
The game's structure jumps between three distinct eras. Désilets broke down the time distribution during his presentation: 5% takes place in the present day, where a character named Clio deciphers an ancient book in a library. Another 15% unfolds in 1999 with Clio's father, Aaron. The remaining 80% drops players into 1666 as Noa, a witch navigating Amsterdam's dark streets.
Désilets described the 1666 and 1999 sections as "kind of like a mirror of each other." The pattern is intentional. As he explained in additional remarks: "Every 333 years, something stirs. We wanted to build a world where the historical and the supernatural don't just exist side-by-side, they collide."
The Cat Twist
Désilets saved his biggest reveal for the end of the presentation. "The main thing, and it's very important, is... you play as a cat!" The audience saw footage of a feline running and leaping through spooky Amsterdam streets. But this isn't just animal simulation. The cat is possessed by a human consciousness. "A cat who is actually a guy from 1999," Désilets clarified.
“This isn't just an action game; it's a piece of history that was taken, lost, and finally reclaimed. Playing as a cat in 1999 was the missing piece of the puzzle I needed to finish this story.”
— Patrice Désilets, Creative Director at Panache Digital Games
The mechanic has already generated strong reactions online. Reddit's r/gaming community and longtime Désilets fans are calling the cat gameplay a smart way to differentiate 1666: Amsterdam from standard action titles. After 15 years of anticipation, players expected something unusual. A possessed cat fits the bill.
From Devil to Witches
The game's supernatural elements evolved during its long development. Désilets originally planned for players to control the devil himself. But shows like Lucifer changed his mind. "There'd been a lot of onscreen depictions of Satan lately," he explained. Instead, he pivoted to witches as representatives of occult power.
The switch makes historical sense. 17th-century Amsterdam was a hub of commerce, art, and religious tension. Witch trials, while less common in the Dutch Republic than elsewhere in Europe, still carried cultural weight. Désilets is building a game that blends real history with fantasy horror.
What's Available Now
The 30-minute prologue is free to download on Steam and Epic Games Store. It introduces all three timelines and the cat mechanic. Panache Digital Games currently has 70 developers working on the full release. No release date has been announced beyond "TBA," but after 15 years, players finally have something tangible to experience.
1666: Amsterdam will launch on PC. Console versions haven't been confirmed.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is 1666: Amsterdam free to play?
The 30-minute prologue is free on Steam and Epic Games Store. The full game will be a paid release, though pricing hasn't been announced.
What platforms will 1666: Amsterdam release on?
PC is confirmed. Console versions have not been announced.
Who is Patrice Désilets?
He directed Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, Assassin's Creed 1 and 2, and Ancestors: The Humankind Odyssey. He's the co-founder of Panache Digital Games.
Why did 1666: Amsterdam take 15 years to make?
The game was caught in corporate turmoil when THQ went bankrupt in 2013. Ubisoft acquired the studio and canceled the project. Désilets spent years in legal battles to reclaim the rights before resuming development.
What is the cat gameplay in 1666: Amsterdam?
Players control a cat that is possessed by a man from 1999. The mechanic ties into the game's three-timeline structure and supernatural themes.
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Source: IGN All
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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