
Xbox Store Just Got Duped: Anti-Gravity Racing Is Literally WipEout in Disguise
July 11, 20252025, and somehow we’re talking about the original WipEout PS1 game—except it’s not on the PlayStation. Instead, a title called Anti-Gravity Racing for Xbox randomly appeared on the Microsoft Store. It appears to be a glorified emulator dump of the beloved 1995 Psygnosis game, with minimal enhancements and sold as a new product.
No, this isn’t some clever homage or spiritual successor. According to Digital Foundry’s deep dive (and hats off to them), Anti-Gravity Racing is quite literally “WipEout for Xbox.” Same UI, same menus, even the same audio design down to the iconic race countdown chime. Oof.
Where Did It Even Come From?
The listing dropped with zero fanfare. No announcement. No trailer. No press previews. It stealth-released straight onto the Xbox Series X/S and Xbox One storefronts, aping the legendary high-speed futuristic racer that helped define PlayStation in the ’90s. And get this — the dev listed is Gametropolis Ltd. Good luck finding any legitimate info on them. This has “drop-and-disappear” written all over it.
Is This Legal? Uh… Questionable At Best
If your eyebrows just shot higher than a Wasp Class ship in Zone Mode, you’re not wrong. Psygnosis was absorbed by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe, making the WipEout IP a Sony property. Publishing that content on Xbox is pretty obviously a copyright no-no — unless, of course, this was properly licensed (spoiler: it wasn’t). Digital Foundry notes that Anti-Gravity Racing appears to run on a PlayStation emulator, loading assets straight from what looks like a WipEout ROM. The irony of using emulated Sony first-party code on a Microsoft platform is not lost on anyone. Especially the WipEout community, who are already busy roasting the rollout on every social feed imaginable.
No Enhancements, Just WipEout Repackaged?
If you were hoping maybe this was a “loving remaster” or an “enhanced HD update”, prepare to be disappointed. Digital Foundry’s tech analysis shows no visual upgrades. Just a blunt, unfinessed screen filter (which can actually make the game look worse) and adjusted control mappings to match Xbox controllers. No increased resolution. No upscaling. Zero effort to modernise the interface. For all its neon-futurism, WipEout PS1 was designed for CRT screens and 90s chips. Tossing it onto a 2025 console without context, tweaks, or love… yeah, not the flex they thought it would be.
Price Tag Panic

Here’s the real kicker: Anti-Gravity Racing is listed at $14.99 (£12.49) on the Xbox Store. For a blatantly emulated rehash of a 30-year-old game, that’s a hard sell, especially when fan remakes and PC-compatible emulators are free and arguably better. There’s also zero word on region restrictions. So, yep, anyone, anywhere with an Xbox console can unwittingly buy this and not even realise they’ve just paid for a 90s Sony classic under a fake name.
The tragedy here isn’t just that someone ripped off WipEout — it’s that people genuinely want a true WipEout revival. This series defined PS1 racing, practically invented anti-gravity combat speedways, and oozed old-school futurism. Seeing it repackaged like bootleg merch only stings more. No Multiplayer. Despite the original’s campaign and competitive options back in the day, this port (if we can even call it that) is 100% single-player. There’s no online multiplayer, no local split-screen, no leaderboards. Just you. Alone. Racing ghosts of 1995.
Xbox Store Oversight or Intentional Blind Eye?
This brings up a larger conversation about Xbox Store curation. If something like Anti-Gravity Racing can quietly sneak in and impersonate a classic from another platform, what else is being sold without scrutiny? Indie devs and retro fans alike are calling foul, and rightly so. And while the store hasn’t yet removed the game, there’s mounting pressure. Either Microsoft missed the red flags, or worse, someone thought no one would notice. Either way, oof.
Should You Buy It? Nah — Seriously, Don’t
Unless you’re curious to see what bootleg WipEout looks like on an Xbox Series X (and enjoy wasting a tenner), just don’t. The legal grey area alone should be enough to scare off fans. Plus, if you really want to revisit Psygnosis’ beloved anti-grav racer, there are way better ways to do it — ways that don’t pad the pockets of anonymous pseudo-devs. Anti-Gravity Racing Xbox is the kind of game launch that makes you squint and ask, “Is this even real?” Sad part is — yeah, it is. But hopefully not for long.
Announcement Date: None — stealth launched July 2025
Platforms: Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S
Price: $14.99 / £12.49
Pre-orders: Not applicable — released suddenly
Visuals: Original PlayStation graphics with added screen filter
Multiplayer: Not available
Geographical Restrictions: None, available globally via Xbox Store