This week, we look at "Darkwing Duck" for the NES and Game Boy, and congratulate ourselves on our ability to deviate so far from our remit after a mere five episodes. Way to hold course, Ben.
This week, another Grab Bag. This time it's a selection of four platform games that defined the 90s - Another World (aka Out Of This World), Flashback: The Quest for Identity, Superfrog and James Pond 2: Codename RoboCod.
This week, we pay tribute to the point 'n' click adventure games of LucasArts with looks at three quirky ports of their earliest games - Maniac Mansion, The Secret of Monkey Island, and Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders.
This week it's Rayman 2, one of the defining 3D platformers of its time. We look at every one of the home console ports, and then try to pretend the handheld versions don't exist.
This week, we look at "Pokémon Trading Card Game" for the Game Boy Color on the grounds that it's a "port" of a card game which is itself a "conversion" of a Game Boy game. Admittedly we're stretching the definition of "port" rather thin here, but work with us on this one.
This week, we take a look at two ports of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles platform game... two ports that both came out for the same system. What? Weird, eh? Watch on!
This week, we take another look at "Worms", specifically "Worms: The Director's Cut" for the Amiga - an enhanced, updated version of the original game released exclusively for the platform the game was born on.
This week, it's "Donkey Kong" for the Super Game Boy, a port that isn't actually a port at all! Or IS it?! ...Yes. No. Yes. Absolutely. It isn't. No. What? Yes.
This week, we look at the events that led to the corruption, degradation and near-collapse of society as we know it - the release of "Grand Theft Auto" and its sequel for the Game Boy Color handheld gaming console.
This week, it's a Game Boy Advance port of of PAYBACK, a Grand Theft Auto clone originally developed for the Amiga, then ported to the Game Boy Advance. But is it just a clone? Or does it do something a little extra...?
This week, it's Mortal Kombat Gold, an updated and "enhanced" port of Midway Games' Mortal Kombat 4. Note that "enhanced" is in big sarcastic quotation marks.
This week, in our season finale, we review our first season and paper over the cracks in our factual inadequacy with the TRUTH. Name one other webseries that goes back and fixes their mistakes! Oh, all of them. Fair enough, then.
In this episode, we look at DELUXE PACMAN and TETTRIX, fan-made knock-offs of classic gaming staples. Are they any good? Doesn't matter, because my mother loved them and this episode is actually about her.