00:00
00:00
Newgrounds Background Image Theme

skylarker-drawss just joined the crew!

We need you on the team, too.

Support Newgrounds and get tons of perks for just $2.99!

Create a Free Account and then..

Become a Supporter!

Reviews for "Strategy Guide Ep. 2"

a good reminder

of how hard that game was. I liked the movie very much it was damn good i'll anticapte the third ep.

Sweeeet

Never saw the first one, but after watching that i really want to. I think it's original and creative, funny too. Where sis you get that theme song from....

Mmmm....Better then the first one.

To me it's better then the first one. Well anyway good luck on number 3 man.

Very good form.

I liked that alot, but it didn't really tell me much about the game. So why call it "Strategy Guide" when there is no Strategy involved? It defeats the purpose... But good job on this hillarious movie nonetheless.

Needle responds:

It's pretty much just a title. Writing an actual strategy guide for a game like Ghosts N' Goblins would be inane, because the game is friggin' impossible. :) I'm more interested in developing characters and telling a story than teaching how to collect the powerup to beat the game. After all, that's why companies like Prima and websites like GameFAQS exist! :) Thanks for the feedback!

yea

what can i say? it was good, btu it focused more on the family tree then the game...
yea NES games are a bitch in general...i mean when a good number you wouldn't save you were forced to beat it in a day, inless you were gonan goto the trouble of keeping teh system on pause while you sleep or something insane like that, but then what if when you run into the room the next morning and stomp to hard and the fault retro machine stops working!??!
lol, damn those fault contacts...you really must comment on how it takes too much effort to get things started, with the dusty games and the blwoing in them and all that sort...inless mine was jsut shit.

Needle responds:

Yea, Nintendo systems get worn out pretty quickly, but these days there's actually a pretty big market for new connectors. Go onto eBay and do a search for "72-pin connector Nintendo"... for eight bucks, you can buy a new connector. There are guides all over the internet for replacing a connector, all you need is a screwdriver and an hour of your time. I did it to my own Nintendo and now it works like I bought it yesterday!

And oh yea, I have a really good gag I plan on using eventually regarding blinking cartridges. Stay tuned!