Difference between revisions of "The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle"

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===Good===
 
===Good===
* [[Hiroyuki Masuno]]'s jazzy music is surprisingly enjoyable for such an otherwise low-quality game which doesn't even attempt to have music from any of the licenses it used.
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* [[Hiroyuki Masuno]]'s jazzy music is surprisingly enjoyable for such an otherwise low-quality generic game. And while most of the releases don't have licensed music, the Japanese Game Boy port adds a single Mickey Mouse tune.
* I like how different tools have to be used against enemies in different ways, but I would like to see more variety. The weight, crate, safe, and bucket all function the same way, only differing slightly in how far they can be pushed.
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* I like how the different tools are used against enemies in different ways, but I would like to see more variety. The weight, crate, safe, and bucket all function the same way, only differing slightly in how far they can be pushed.
* With 80 levels, the game is a pretty good length, taking a couple hours to win.
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* With 80 levels, the game is a pretty good length, requiring a couple hours to win.
  
 
===Bad===
 
===Bad===

Revision as of 11:08, 29 August 2019

North American NES box.

The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle is a platform action puzzle game developed by Kotobuki System and skinned with three different franchises for different platforms and regions. The original Famicom Disk System release was published by Kotobuki System on 1989-02-16 and featured a Who Framed Roger Rabbit theme. The Japanese Game Boy released was published on 1989-05-09 and featured a Mickey Mouse theme. Then the game was published in North America by Kemco▲Seika for the NES and Game Boy a few months later with a Bugs Bunny theme. This is the first in the Crazy Castle series which includes other franchises as well.

I discovered this game while trying to better familiarize myself with Kemco's catalog of games. I played it for a little while and quickly got bored with it. I checked online to see how many levels there were, and calculated how much longer it would take to beat the game based on how long I had already been playing, and decided I may as well finish it.

Status

I do not own this game, but I have beaten the US Game Boy port.

Review

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4 2 3 6 2

Best Version: 34%

— This section contains spoilers! —

Good

  • Hiroyuki Masuno's jazzy music is surprisingly enjoyable for such an otherwise low-quality generic game. And while most of the releases don't have licensed music, the Japanese Game Boy port adds a single Mickey Mouse tune.
  • I like how the different tools are used against enemies in different ways, but I would like to see more variety. The weight, crate, safe, and bucket all function the same way, only differing slightly in how far they can be pushed.
  • With 80 levels, the game is a pretty good length, requiring a couple hours to win.

Bad

  • This is one of those games where it's pretty obvious that the developers already had a game in mind and then stuck a thin veneer of a franchise on top of it.
  • The graphics are pretty bad for all versions of the game and the Game Boy port has really bad sprite flicker. And it would have been nice is they added more characters or at least didn't have four versions of one character, but only for each of others. In the NES version there are four variants of Sylvester, but only one Yosemite Sam, Daffy Duck, and Wile E. Coyote.
  • The difficulty of the levels is all over the place. Some of the very last levels are really easy while some in the first 20 are really hard.
  • Since you get a password for each level, and every time you use a password you start with another 5 lives, lives are entirely pointless.
  • Near the end of the game, difficulty is simulated by requiring the player to go down long stairways or pipes. This is an abuse of luck, not increased difficulty.
  • The game doesn't notify you of your progress very well. It would be nice to see a carrot counter, an icon showing when you have a boxing glove, and something to indicate when you're about to run out of invincibility after getting the carrot juice.
  • The ending is unimpressive, and the US Game Boy ending has bad Engrish.
  • I think the developers missed an opportunity to award bonus points for various contingencies like killing all the enemies on the level, ending the level with an unused boxing glove, etc.
  • Although you walk smoothly up stairways, you drop down them in large falls.
  • Normally, I like the idea of being able to watch a playback of your game, but since the levels are so short, and you can't save them, I don't really see the point. I wish the programmers had spent more time polishing the game rather than wasting it on this feature.
  • The story in the manual is pretty awful, and it incorrectly names Wile E. Coyote "Wiley Coyote."

Ugly

  • The controls are awful. For no given reason, you can't change direction on stairways or even at the very top or bottom of stairways. Also, if you press up or down when there isn't an exit up or down, you will instead move in the direction you're facing (left or right). I died many times because of this unusual control scheme.
  • There isn't much variety to the game. Within the first 10 levels you'll see all the graphics and hear all the music of the game except for the ending. This makes the bulk of the game boring.

Media

Box Art

Documentation

Screenshots

Videos

Links

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