#punch out
Happy 20th Anniversary to GameCube!
Happy 15th Anniversary to Wii!
Via @Boogie2988
Boyfriends
Boyfriends
Macho is in Spain without the S _(T-T_ )
Joker: I’ve connected the dots.
Little Mac: You didn’t connect shit.
Joker: I’ve connected them.
Little Mac: So I regret something I did today.
Little Mac: I gave my friend a boombox and he hasn’t stopped playing really bad music since.
Joker, walking in with a boombox:
Little Mac: Joker, what are you doing?
Joker:
Joker: *starts playing Caramelldensen and starts dancing*
I can finally show this one!
A small preview of the pixel artbackground,spriteandanimationwork I have been doing for the Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out!! parody/homage level for Vanilla Gaming Company’s game Vanilla Beast: Ace in the Hole.
The game will have a huge amount of minigames/levels, each of them in the hands of a different artist, inspired by various classic games likeThe Punisher,Outrun, and Double Dragon, but also referencing movies,musicand general pop culture from the 80’s.
Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out!! is a game I used to play a lot as a kid, and that I still love and enjoy today, so getting to work on reimagining it has been a wonderful job!
You can read more about this project here:
•First Gameplay Trailer
•Wishlist on Steam
•Kickstarter (starts on March 15th)
Let’s face it: Mario is just as synonymous with video games as Pikachu, Sonic, or ridiculously priced downloadable content. In his panel Plumber’s Log: Through the Years with Mario, Shadow Wolf Z took video game fans on a tour of the life of everyone’s favorite turtle-stomping plumber.
Here are some highlights–and low-lights–of Mario’s history that were covered in the panel.
- The character debuted in 1981 as the protagonist in Donkey Kong. Back then, he wasn’t even Mario; he was just known as “Jumpman” (a name that would be more fitting for Luigi). It wasn’t until the original Mario Bros. game a few years later that he would be named…and given a brother.
- So, where did “Mario” come from? Video game creators definitely didn’t need to look far for their inspiration: he was named after Mario Segale, who was the landlord–not a plumber, but the landlord–renting the Nintendo company a warehouse outside of Seattle in the early 1980s.
- Super Mario Bros. 3, one of the most beloved games in the entire series, also had the absolute best commercial to promote it (despite it showing absolutely nothing about the game).
- Mario makes cameo appearances in other Nintendo games, perhaps the most well-known being his role as the boxing ring ref in Punch-Out!!! He has also popped up in NES sports games Golf and Pinball and, if you angle it correctly, in a painting in the Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.
- If you were a child of the 80s, you no doubt remember the cringe-worthy Super Mario Bros. Super Show, which combined cartoons based off of Super Mario Bros. and (the North American version of) Super Mario Bros. 2 with low-budget, live-action segments starring wrestling star Captain Lou Albano as Mario and Canadian actor Danny Wells as Luigi.
This show was Oscar material compared to its replacement series: Club Mario. The (thankfully) short-lived series kept the cartoons intact, but replaced live-action Mario and Luigi with “Tommy Treehugger” and “Co M.C.,” two hip-as-far-as-out-of-touch-TV-executives-are-concerned Mario fanatics who spent their days on a rooftop in some random city.
Mario had countless video games. He had several TV series. He even had a movie (which we will never talk about in public). But did you know that he even had his own line of products? At the peak of his popularity in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Nintendo licensed their mascot for everything, from a breakfast cereal to mac and cheese to even shampoo.
–Mike Fenn, AB staff blogger