Back in the great days of my youth almost 19 years ago, when the NES was king and I was a portly little quiet kid. A kid who escaped everyday to the Mushroom Kingdom and Dracula's Castle to avoid my boring existence as a grade school child. I had very few friends and a non-existent home life so video games became a coping mechanism to help my personal development and became my best friend.
The NES in today's world is considered archaic, dilapidated, old, and maybe even silly; to me, it was the best game console ever made (until the SNES that is). Many of the games that were there to be enjoyed were ones you had to beat within the time-span from when the power button was pressed to the on position to the time when you either: A> Accidentially Hit the Reset Button, B> Had a Power Outage (prevalent in the south), C> The Connection Between Cartridge and NES Failed, or D> You Hit The Power Button. If you didn't beat the game in that span of time, you had to start over from the beginning, usually World/Level 1-1.
There were some games that did come with more advance features such as Battery Backup (which is now starting to fail in some of my older games ;__:) or Password Features that were great as long as you write it down exactly as it appeared, if not, back to World 1-1 Noob! There was however a way around this problem, the NES didn't generate heat much at all, the power supply did, so many of us started to leave the NES on all night long while we slept.
I can remember going home from school on Friday night playing all day until I couldn't possibly go any further, shutting off the TV, the lights and everything else only to have the square cyclopic red eyeball of the NES stare at me all night like HAL 9000 in
2001: A Space Odyssey threatening to kill me while I slept. Today's list deals with those few games that forced me to do so on many occasions. It's the Top 10 Games You Had To Leave The NES On All Night To Beat! See you at the end.
Goonies II
While the original
Goonies game was never released here in America, its sequel did manage to see the light of day. The story had you playing as Mikey trying to rescue the other Goonies as well as a mermaid from the clutches of the evil Fratellis who have escaped from prison once again.
This game was long, and in most respects a pain in the ass to play when it went to its faux-3D rooms that you had to explore. Other than those, it was a really really fun game to play. If it wasn't for the repeating rendition of Cyndi Lauper's song from the movie, it would be a great game. The game does have a password feature but since it was a bit too complicated like most Konami games, if you messed up one letter or one character...it's back to the beginning of the game.
Clash At Demonhead
One of the more relatively unknown games I own on my NES,
Clash At Demonhead was a real acquired taste. The game seemed majorly flawed by its graphics and stunted gameplay, but the story is where the game shined. If you've never had a chance to play this game, give it a little time and it will come to grow on you and become one of the best platforming adventure games you've ever played. Well, at least that's my opinion.
This was yet another game that had no way of saving your game unless you really enjoyed entering a password that could have very easily been transcribed wrong. The risk was always just a bit too high for me to quit the game with a password. I even had a chalkboard in my room (whiteboards didn't exist back then) that I would use to keep track of all of my game secrets and passwords.
Faxanadu
Faxanadu was perhaps one of the first action RPGs that I played while growing up. Sure, I had spent a whole bunch of time playing
Castlevania 2: Simon's Quest, but this game provided more for me. The music and graphics used in the game were substantial for the time the game was released. This was perhaps one of the first games that I ever played that used music as more than just background filler.
The worst part about playing any RPG on the old NES wasn't so much that it was hard, but the fact that so many of them used passwords instead of batteries to save your progress.
Faxanadu was brutal because it used both uppercase and lowercase letters, numbers, AND punctuation marks in its passwords. I guess playing games like this set me up for the job I do today...making passwords for simpletons.
Metal Gear
Oh man the first
Metal Gear was a nerdy kids wet dream, it had it all: simulated stealth, cigarettes, c-rations, 15 different weapons and a cardboard box you could sneak around in. The only problem, is that I didn't quite know all that was going on thanks to the lack of good localization (trust me the MSX version was much better). Kojima had a great game even for the 80s standards of Nintendo games, it was released under the Ultra label to get past Nintendo's embargo on game companies making too many games per year. As has been one of my favorite games all throughout my childhood.
To get an example of how retarded the game's save feature was, here ya go. There was NO battery at all and when you called on the radio to get your password you got a string of 25 numbers that you would have to write down. 25 is a lot of stuff to write down and to input into ANY game. Here's the password that I actually used to have memorized so I could start the game with all the equipment if you don't believe how much work old games used to be: 5XZ1C GZZZG UOOOU UYRZZ NTOZ3. Tell me that's not a tad overkill...
Ghosts & Goblins
This game gets one paragraph, and only one because it fucking sucks how this game played me as a kid. I get to the last level and up the the boss only to be dragged ALL THE WAY back to the beginning of the game. At that point I turned the game off and went to bed angry. I got up and beat the game the next morning only to take it back to game store to demand a full return of my money. There, I said it, fuck this game.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
A game that I have only beaten once, ever, in the whole time that I have owned the cartridge. I even got punished because I was so late coming home that night because I was at the last level facing off against Shredder. In case you didn't know,
TMNT also has a rather negative stigma as a really tough game that is unforgiving. Whether your hangups be on the level with the electric seaweed and the underwater bombs, or the multiple times that you have to witness screen flicker from too many sprites on the screen at one time, this game could fuck you up quickly.
Do I even need to remind the people here that Raphael was a pretty worthless character because his sais had an attack range of maybe 3 inches? Its not so much that this game didn't have a password or save feature, but it was always tough for me to reach for the power button when I spent 3 hours getting to the 4th stage. At times I miss how tough games were, but then again I remember how mad some always made me and how often I would take all my aggression out on my poor defenseless controllers.
Super Maro Bros. 3
Ok, ok, I'm sure there are some of you calling bullshit on this one being here on the list, but lets face the facts here.
Mario 3 is a simple game if you cheat and use the warp whistles, but what about the people like me who wanted to play the ENTIRE game themselves? I can recall with great joy the moment I made it above the clouds in World 5 and the triumph I felt after beating World 7 all by myself. If anyone was going to be tapping that sweet princess peach it was going to be me!
Man, is it just me, but does it not take forever to beat every single stage in
SMB3? What's worse is the fact that Nintendo in their infinite short sightedness decided that this game didn't need any kind of save feature! Thankfully when I bought
Super Mario All-Stars, it remedied the problem and had a save feature for EACH Mario game on the cart.
Little Nemo: The Dream Master
It's no surprise that most of the games that I've put on my top 10 are some of the most despicable examples of hard games, and
Little Nemo was no slouch in that department either. The game seems somewhat of a kids game until you get to the train on the Topsy Turvy level and spend the next 2 hours trying to figure out the whole pattern to it all to get to the next stage.
I loved this game for the mere fact that you bribe the animals you come across to let you "borrow" them by throwing candy at them. Bee Mario? Sorry it was done back before the Wii ever thought of it when Nemo could become a bee himself. Oh man, there is just something about Capcom games from back in the late 80s that will always warm my heart to think about them.
Bionic Commando
I creamed myself when I saw that this game was being remade in glorious HD and in 3D graphics. It is a retro-gamer's dream to have a game like
Bionic Commando be remade. This is one of the most classic examples of a quality game, it had great graphics, sound, music, animation, and a somewhat plausible story featuring everyone's favorite punching bag: Hitler!
There was no chance of me ever turning off my console once I started playing
Bionic Commando when I was young. After spawn camping one spot in the first area to build up my life points (it took collecting 300 bullets randomly dropped by baddies), and collecting all of my equipment to cross the big span between the first areas to the final areas...I became a zombie. I would purposely leave my NES on just to prove to some of my friends that I had in fact beat the game. You see, back then it was easy to say that you beat a game, it was another point entirely to prove that you did.
Battletoads
Ah, what can I say about one of the best games to ever grace the good ol' NES? It was one of Rare's first in a long line of awesomesauce that the company became known for so many years later. But there is a catch with
Battletoads, this game was really fucking hard, not just a little hard, really really fucking hard. The game's length is pretty extensive too, I have yet to see a game like this where there are so many varied elements of gameplay. If there was one thing I could leave behind with
Battletoads, it would have to be the speeder bike level.
The game had NO password settings, NO battery backup, and was quite possibly one of the meanest games to ever allow multiplayer. There was friendly fire in this game in a time where friendly fire wasn't even defined outside the military. That never stopped my and my friends from just beating the shit out of each other though. I can remember playing just that first level almost like it were my very own version of
Street Fighter II. With a game as brutal as this though, who could blame me?
The Simpsons: Bart vs The Space Mutants
If there's anything I hate more than poorly designed games, its poorly designed games that have no apparent way of beating them. That's were this awesome example of licensed gaming comes into play. The game looked great, but was nigh impossible to win at it. I can even think of the area in the game that always hung me up. It was right where you have to run up the dinosaur skeleton and make this unbelievable leap of faith. The game was very sparing with giving you extra lives but you go through them at an insane rate.
To this day, I've never beat this game but I can recall having to leave my NES on overnight only to lose every SINGLE extra life that I had within 5 minutes. Jim Sterling can get mad, but his hate for
Mass Effect comes nowhere close to the amount of hatred that I held in my heart for this game. With all being said, I would still pick up a copy.
Well, this concludes yet another Weird Kid’s Top 10 list. I hope you all enjoyed reading it. I know for certain that there are many of you out there that will disagree with some of my choices for this list, but keep in mind that this is in no way a definitive listing nor is it meant to be taken seriously. Its all for fun, just enjoy reading and take something away with you or leave a comment if you so wish.
As always, please let me know if you have a particular Top 10 that you’d like to see, and I’d be happy to oblige. For all of my faithful fans that do submit ideas, I promise I’ll eventually get around to yours. Thank you again for reading. See you next time.
I remember playing SMB3 with my mom when I was little. We didn't just leave the game on all night, we PLAYED it all night.
Fuck, I think we even did so on school nights. :O
I remember staying up all night with my brothers trying to beat mario 3 when we got it.
I also remember getting so pissed off at the goonies 2. But then playing it almost non-stop one weekend and finally beating it.
Bart vs the Space Mutants was such an epic game.
I really enjoyed it.
Holy shit. The final four games you listed were the first ones that came to mind when I read the blog title. Those bastards also had me sitting there for hours only to go to bed with the NES still on mocking me. Great post.
Gah... why do all the most awesome sounding games have to be before my time, now I don't have the patience for them.
There was a Simpsons game for the NES?
Did you ever get your money back on Ghosts and Goblins?
Also, Spiderman: Separation Anxiety for SNES had a horrible password system. It gave you 5-10 seconds to write down a 30 character password! It was so mean, we would only be able to get half the password and we would write down the rest on our second or third way through...
By "we" I mean me and my brother.
Yeah, also "Plok" and "James Pond" were also notorious, we kept the SNES on for days...
I forgot all about the Dream Master game. I made my parents rent it for me so many times that they could have bought it twice.
There were multiple Simpson's games for the NES.
I remember leaving Tecmo Super Bowl on for over a week so me and my roommates could finish our season. It is suppose to save the season when you turn it off, but it was pretty unreliable. I still remember that fateful night when that god damn tennis ball sailed through the air, as if it were shot from a NES-seeking launcher. can't...finish...
Ahh yes. I remember doing this on quite a few games.. I would do this for the Final Fantasy series too, if the save point was just out of reach.
Also, sometimes I would do it to grind but don't tell Nintendo or they might take away all my Wii points!! D:
Fuck, I'm all about those Mega Man stickers that came with Little Nemo
Wow, Bart Vs. The Space Mutants... That was a bastard. Between my brother and I we finally beat it, but man was it evil.
I still don't know how Battletoads ends because of this.
Seriously, I only made it past the hover bike part like once, but died shortly after that.
I tried playing through it on the Genesis like a year ago, and I go to that snake climbing thing and gave up.
Great game, but dammit it's hard.
I remember when my friend and I played Battletoads for a week straight. We would play one day, part ways for the night, get up real early and start playing again. We were at the second last level and the power went out and BAM! lost all our progress. I've never been so sad about losing a save before.
I remember the fights with my parents about leaving the NES powered on for some of these... she tought it used to mutch electricity :-)
I just want some of those wingboots from Faxanadu.
Super Mario All Stars was the fucking shit. I loved that cartridge......
Anyway, yeah man it takes a while to beat Super Mario Bros. 3 100%. Anywhere from 4 to 7 hours I'd say. Not as long as we'd think, but who cares? Every level is made of pure fucking win. It's a great way to spend 5 hours of your life.
Anyway, great list dude. Is the Simpsons game the one where you start off on the Skateboard with Bart? If I'm thinking of the correct game (how many Simpson games are there for the NES?), that shit was hard. I rented it many times as a kid.
GREAT list. I had several of these, including Bart v. Space Mutants and Goonies II. To me, Ghost n' Goblins will always be the toughest game I ever played. Well, hopefully it will. I shudder to think that I will encounter a more difficult one.
HOLY SHIT. I had that Simpsons game and could never figure out what the fuck you were supposed to be doing in it.
Reading this list depresses me because I remember those days. Although me and my Dad just stayed up one night and destroyed SMB3.
To this day, I still haven't beating the original TMNT and fuck that game. Also I'll throw in a fuck Battletoads for good measure.
Hells yes to battle toads man. I can't tell you how many nights in a row my system was on thanks to that game.
Great list. By the time I reached number 3 I was thinking, "There's no way he left out Battletoads...is there?" Excellent list, you do not disappoint.
I never got past the second level of Bart versus the Space Mutants, but I played it more times than I care to remember. That game was almost as frustrating as Adventures of Dino Riki. If you can say you've made it past level 2 in that game, then you're a liar.
Little Nemo was GOD! And hard, but it was really good. Great list Ex, but I still have my doubts about Mario Bros.3 since it wasn't that hard and it had the flutes.
I loved the NES Simpsons games, I think I never finished Vs The Space Mutants but I did finish the other one (VS The World, I think).
And I really really want to play Battletoads again, I haven't played anything related since Battletoads & Double Dragon during the last days of the SNES era.
@Styos
He addresses that about SMB 3 "Mario 3 is a simple game if you cheat and use the warp whistles, but what about the people like me who wanted to play the ENTIRE game themselves?"