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Reviews
Super Mario Bros. (1993)
No Justice for a Good Game?
I'm sorry, but the movie version of Super Mario Bros. just didn't do any justice to the classic video game. The plot didn't seem to click, the references to the actual games were few, and the characters? Well, Mario and Luigi were well-done, but the Koopas just weren't. All in all, we old-school gamers deserved better when we wanted to see our wrench-toting heroes on the silver screen.
GoldenEye 007 (1997)
A blast and more.
What can be said about one of the greatest N64 games ever? That the action is fast enough to keep even a seasoned FPS veteran sweating bullets quite literally? That the graphics are great, down to the explosions that everyone loves to see? That nothing is quite as fun as playing multiplayer mode, and shooting your friends and siblings in the back with submachine guns?
Very little beats Goldeneye 007. About the only thing missing was voice acting, and a bit more intelligence in the enemy soldiers. If you have an N64, and you like shooting people and things crossed with espionage, get a copy of this.
Bishôjo senshi Sêrâ Mûn (1992)
The True Moonies are united.
We have been brought together here on the Internet for a reason. But I digress already. Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon is the kind of show you either love for its romance, action, and pure raw energy, or hate for the same reasons. I have only love for it, not only for the show itself, but for the characters. Even if I never admit it, I love (almost) everything about it.
The Hyrule fantasy: Zeruda no densetsu (1986)
A classic beyond all others.
The Legend of Zelda was one of the first games to be released with the NES, and also one of the best. It was much more than just going from dungeon to dungeon, collecting Triforce pieces, it was also exploring, slaying enemies like those pesky Octoroks, Tektites, and (scream with me now) Darknuts, and getting yourself lost in the midst of Hyrule. SPOILER ALERT Not only that, but (stop reading if you never played this or NEVER finished it OR saw the code) it had a second quest, with changed dungeons (like the first five shaped like the letters in Zelda), switched locations, and much tougher enemies such as sword-shooting Stalfos skeletons. Overall, LoZ was one of the truly must-play games of the NES. If you have never played it, I am saddened.