M.u.s.c.l.e was the US Adaption of The Kinikuman Game based on the well known Japanese Kinikuman Series, a Proper Kinikuman show did make it in the US known as Ultimate Muscle : The Kinikuman Legacy
That penguin race game was my first game ever played on NES (well, actually a Famiclone called Pegasus, that brand was big in Poland) that was included on 168 in 1 cartridge. Thanks for bringing memories! Going to find that damn 168 in 1 Super Contra Multicart somewhere on the attic and give it a go again :D
Because of the games shown in the video, I was reminded of my first game system. I had a standalone controller-console version of these cartridges. It was basically a bright-orange cheap-plastic N64 controller with yellow buttons (2 A and B buttons, a start, a reset, and a D-Pad) that had two wires coming out of it. One was a direct scart-output, and the other was a powerchord. It had a bunch of NES classics (Such as Adventure Island), and was pretty much the only game system I had until I turned 6, which was when I got an actual Nintendo 64 handmedown from my cousin :P
As a person that lives on the west coast, whenever I see the name "Quick Stop", all that bursts into my head is the movie Clerks (1994). That is all. Awesome video!
My second game ever was a 32in1 for the Famicom. You took me back to this with these, tons of games I always played back then. Circus Charlie, Legend of Kage, Tennis, Battle City, Muscle, that 3D flight fighter, Road Fighter, other games I totally forgot about. Awesome! Need to get a Famicom, I still have the cartridge.
I was really sad when this was over. I could watch someone smarting off about ripoff video games and toys for hours and hours. And I'm not being sarcastic.
This really takes me back. Multi-game carts were very rare in Scandinavia in the 90's but my father managed to get ahold of a 260-in-1 through a friend. It was a 72-pin (NES) cart which, if you opened it up, was a 60-pin (Famicom) cart with a 72-pin adapter inside. It worked in my European version toaster, and it had many of the games you showcase here. I didn't have many other games for my NES at the time and always thought that cart contained a fairly impressive assortment of these earlier games. The downside was the endless amounts of rom hacks; it was probably more like 40-in-1! :)
In Eastern Europe these things were our actual NES games.Nes was never released here so we only had the Chinese Pirates here.Battle City is one of the most popular games for the system along whit Super Mario,Road Fighter and Galaxian.The actual carts and consoles are being sold even today in Chinese stores ,but the actual consoles are hard to find.I found one whit a keyboard and a mouse and whit a lot of cool stuff.The keyboard is the actual console,and it looks like a computer from the 80s .It actually has a music software to compose awesome 8 bit music,a BASIC programming software and some of them actually have a printer port,but mine doesn't. The games are actually really cheap and cost from 50 cents to a dollar per cart.It's awesome to collect cause you can find a lot of weird stuff for it.I found a zapper that looks like an actual machine gun.The only problem is that the cables are too short but are easy to replace ,cause i think that NES cables would work ok on it since it uses simple Mono AV cable and a NES AC Adapter.The actual console had many names like The Terminator in Serbia , Pegasus in Poland,and Dendy in Russia.My collection has about 40 carts whit about 60 different games,and a keyboard console,i stopped collecting cause the consoles don't last more than 2 years ,and i switched to original consoles that are a bit harder to find in perfect condition.And for some reason my parents are against collecting retro games.
The Sega Mega Drive 2 is onw of the better clones outta there. My console works 'till to this day and it is almost 17 years old. I would say avoid Polystation and the keyboard ones.
In south America this class of games were pretty common to found (mostly for the time (2000-05) and the lack of actual SNES and other "retro consoles") i remember playing each one of this videogames in the "family game" (a mix between the famicom and the Sega genesis)
My Grandparents ran a foster home in the 80's and my brother and I would go there for summer vacation and play NES and 2600 with the foster kids. Because there were so many kids living there, my Grandmother used to buy the multi carts (cause they seemed like a better deal) at a local flea market and they eventually had dozens of them. My favorite one was the "Contra 115 in 1" cart. It had your standard game set and 30 or so versions of Contra and Super C that were actually pretty cool. I really wish I could find that cartridge again.
If anyone's interested and doesn't already know, that "Ninja" game is called Ikki. It's a really early Sunsoft title. That Pikachu one is Nuts n' Milk. The first third party Famicom game. Made by Hudson. (Not a blackbox game though.) I've recently gotten totally hooked on F1 Race and Yie Ar Kung Fu. Totally awesome games. Simple and addicting. I've even fallen in love with Field Combat, a game that I used to hate as a kid. I already wrote a comment like this but it disappeared for some reason, so if someone else sees two similar from me, sorry fer spamming.
Macross. It's Macross. Finally, after all these years of looking and wandering, now I know how this game I spent hours on as a kid was named. Thank you Pat.
in USSR in 1990 we had a "brand new" console "Dandy" which was a contrafact Famicom. But USSR didn't have a copyright law so The "Dandy" factory earn a great deal of money. The cartridges were all "4-in-1", "999-in-1". For the people who lived in "zx-Spectrum" era and "Atari XE/XL" era in USSR it was very strange that something outdated as "Dandy" became hit
Tunny is a hack of SonSon, a Famicom-exclusive very early Capcom game. Ninja is Ikki, which is pretty famous among Japanese kusoge (crappy game) fans. TwinBee is well-polished, unless you're talking about the power-up system. That is even more unforgiving than Gradius (not sure if TwinBee 3 was any better, but it wasn't until the PCE and SNES games that the designers showed some mercy) Supposedly Jaleco planned to dress up Exerion a bit and release it on the NES in the late '80s, like they did with City Connection. And if F1 Race got released in the US, it sounds like Nintendo would've called it Nintendo 500.
The multicarts from HK were really important to have as a kid. Without them, I would have missed out on such a plethora of classic arcade games, which were usually VERY well ported to the FC. Pac-Man, DK & DK Jr, Popeye, Galaxian, Galaga, Battle City, Dig Dug 1&2, Pooyan, Xevious, Track & Field, Mappy, Mario Bros, City Connection, Arabian, Circus Charlie, Road Fighter, MagMax, 1942, Legend of Kage, Arkanoid... all those great ports, PLUS all the console exclusive black box games were on those pirate carts. God bless them!
Here in Brazil we had A LOT of this catridges. Basically because NES was not officially released around here until 1993(?!) and until the date all we had were various NES clones and lots of pirated games. Life here were not easy...
These multicarts were pretty much the only NES games you could get in Bulgaria. I've never held an original NES cartridge in my life. Or an original NES for that matter. Binary Land is actually a fun challenge.
love all your video's pat, i only found your channel a couple years ago but have returned to watch much of you new content and have watched a fair bit of older stuff. your flea market madness explanation today was sad only in that you explain what the flea markets and swap meets have come to in terms of deals and even game availability
I would say that the penguin is dodging seals and not walruses. It is easy to confuse them because they both are part of the Pinnipedia Family, however walruses have tusks and seals do not. Seeing that the sprite does not have tusks makes me conclude that it is infact a seal. Besides that great video.
This was really fun. I remember almost all of those games, and I think here in Argentina they were much more popular because NES systems were really expensive and the only thing we could afford was a "Family Game" (or "Family System"), which if you ask anybody who's 20+ years old is what 8bit games were played on. You say "Family" and everybody thinks of 8bit games. So, since "Family Games" were so popular, and they were a sort of Famicom ripoff, multicarts were the norm if you were a casual player, these were either a good deal on their own or they came free when buying a new system. My dad loves Arkanoid and my mom loves Pac-Man, both of which came in these. Super Mario was the norm too. I remember Battle City, that Arabian game, Mappy, and that... Clu-Clux-Clan game? Very weird name. Where you're kind of a fish flying around, turning with the help of poles in a map where you have to uncover a "crystal drawing" or something like that. More serious games like the Rockman series, Batman: Return of the Joker, Spider-Man and the Sinister Six and others did come in standalone cartridges and I had many of them. I remember almost every videogame shop allowed for trading carts and everything on the market (or most of the market, at least) was copies. A bunch of cyan, pink and purple colored fake cartridges all over. Oh, and when Sega came along it felt so unreachable! Those graphics! Those games! It was such a different market back then, and everything arrived here several years later.
Oh my gosh... that Videovision picture. That's exactly the place I used to rent video games from. Seriously. That's awesome. The building is still there. From the last time I went in, they're still running, but no longer renting video games. I'm not sure now though. Nevertheless, that is awesome.
"This cart is shaped like an N64 cart so it's probably got new games on it" That cart you looked before it used a screenshot from Death Note for Tennis. My question is, who the fuck would manufacture these carts for profit after 2006????
The Famicom lasted for a lobger time in Russia and China. Thats why. They couldn't upgrade their consoles to the SNES and Nintendo wouldn't sell their products in China and Russia, so they created these multicarts and pirated games on "multicarts".
This penguin was quite popular in Japan and in the Middle East as well as Europe back in the 80s and early 90s, he was at one point Konami's mascot. A sequel to this game which was 1000 times better was released for the MSX named as (Penguin Adventure) in Europe, the game was Konami's answer to Super Mario Bros, and before you start making judgments, no it's not as simple as this game, in many ways it is equal to Super Mario bros in terms of quality and multiple secrets, also it had multiple endings which is something missing from Super Mario bros. It's worth mentioning that Binary Land is one of the spin offs for this penguin, there were lots of spin offs on the Famicom and MSX for this character!
If there's something I learnt from those multiple games in one, is that, the less games it have, the better they are. I had a 4 in 1 cartridge once. Twin Bee's, Megaman 4, Adventure's island IV and That hacked version of Jackie chan, but with Mario. Good shit, that cartridge's weight was around 1 ton I think.
when i was a kid, my dad got me a multi-car that looked like a famicom game with an extra peice on it seperated by a silk ribbon of all things...see anything like this pat?
Many years ago, I was in a game store and I noticed a GBA game called "242 in 1" might not be the exact number but my point is it's a multicart game with a bunch of NES games and some other nonsense. It's got some pretty good picks, Tengen Tetris, Megaman among others but then they have some games like Ghostbusters.
You cracked me up Pat! LMAO at your funny comments. I would love to find one of these with the first 5 Mario's done right for the Famicom. Just subbed bro!
I had the 21 in one. It had some of the hack games shown but about 2/3 were existing games including the first 2 Marios, Excitebike, Galaga and Contra.
Harry's Story is actually just a reskin of an unlicensed Famicom game called Titenic.And no, Titenic is NOT a typo. Check out Jontron's channel for the original.
These are the games I grew up with in Turkey. I never saw original NES /SNES maybe really rich kids had those somewhere not where I lived :D These were cheap , they included all and AWESOME !
I have got a 400 in 1 and 198 in 1 famicom multicarts. They are pretty cool cause you can get to play some rare games that would be otherwise really hard to find the original cart of.
In Russia we had olny these and no licensed cartriges. Even pireted concole itself caled Dendy.
In Soviet Russia, console plays YOU 🤷♀️
Fun fact: the Harry Potter game is actually a hack of another hack on the Famicom called Titenic. Yep, Harry is actually Jack from Titanic the movie.
I noticed that because i watched JonTron review Titenic.
I'm sure you did.
Glad you noticed man, i was just about to say that
why everyone hate M.U.S.C.L.E???
2:34 As an Australian, I can confirm that we have penguins running along icy roads and raising flags.
These multicarts were pretty much the only cartridges available in my country. Original NES games never made it here :/
Which country?
ilovenintendo1999
Bulgaria
+Daniel Mitev (Raynaldo) in my country too.
Same in China. Oh, wait! There are some genuine famicom cartridges, but super rare and super expensive compared to the multicart.
Mogy Wang
Didn't China have a videogame ban or something?
Harry's Story = Titenic
I will play any game on Earth
I will play any game on Earth
But I won't play that
Here in Poland in 90s we had Pegasus(famiclone) so I played many of those games.
I feel very nostalgic now. Thanks Pat for bringing good memories.
M.u.s.c.l.e was the US Adaption of The Kinikuman Game based on the well known Japanese Kinikuman Series, a Proper Kinikuman show did make it in the US known as Ultimate Muscle : The Kinikuman Legacy
New Pat is directly confrontational. I like him.
Beyond just the silliness I appreciate the detail to the history of some of these games that goes into these vids.
5:48 = Why Pat is a too often unsung hero of TH-cam.
That penguin race game was my first game ever played on NES (well, actually a Famiclone called Pegasus, that brand was big in Poland) that was included on 168 in 1 cartridge. Thanks for bringing memories! Going to find that damn 168 in 1 Super Contra Multicart somewhere on the attic and give it a go again :D
Because of the games shown in the video, I was reminded of my first game system.
I had a standalone controller-console version of these cartridges. It was basically a bright-orange cheap-plastic N64 controller with yellow buttons (2 A and B buttons, a start, a reset, and a D-Pad) that had two wires coming out of it. One was a direct scart-output, and the other was a powerchord.
It had a bunch of NES classics (Such as Adventure Island), and was pretty much the only game system I had until I turned 6, which was when I got an actual Nintendo 64 handmedown from my cousin :P
That Tunny game is Son Son hacked
You are absolutely...CORRECT
E. J. Thomas
the best kind of correct
As a person that lives on the west coast, whenever I see the name "Quick Stop", all that bursts into my head is the movie Clerks (1994). That is all. Awesome video!
My second game ever was a 32in1 for the Famicom. You took me back to this with these, tons of games I always played back then. Circus Charlie, Legend of Kage, Tennis, Battle City, Muscle, that 3D flight fighter, Road Fighter, other games I totally forgot about. Awesome! Need to get a Famicom, I still have the cartridge.
I was really sad when this was over. I could watch someone smarting off about ripoff video games and toys for hours and hours. And I'm not being sarcastic.
gatsuuga9 same
1:57 that is the cutest damn walk cycle I've ever seen!
This really takes me back. Multi-game carts were very rare in Scandinavia in the 90's but my father managed to get ahold of a 260-in-1 through a friend. It was a 72-pin (NES) cart which, if you opened it up, was a 60-pin (Famicom) cart with a 72-pin adapter inside. It worked in my European version toaster, and it had many of the games you showcase here. I didn't have many other games for my NES at the time and always thought that cart contained a fairly impressive assortment of these earlier games. The downside was the endless amounts of rom hacks; it was probably more like 40-in-1! :)
In Eastern Europe these things were our actual NES games.Nes was never released here so we only had the Chinese Pirates here.Battle City is one of the most popular games for the system along whit Super Mario,Road Fighter and Galaxian.The actual carts and consoles are being sold even today in Chinese stores ,but the actual consoles are hard to find.I found one whit a keyboard and a mouse and whit a lot of cool stuff.The keyboard is the actual console,and it looks like a computer from the 80s .It actually has a music software to compose awesome 8 bit music,a BASIC programming software and some of them actually have a printer port,but mine doesn't. The games are actually really cheap and cost from 50 cents to a dollar per cart.It's awesome to collect cause you can find a lot of weird stuff for it.I found a zapper that looks like an actual machine gun.The only problem is that the cables are too short but are easy to replace ,cause i think that NES cables would work ok on it since it uses simple Mono AV cable and a NES AC Adapter.The actual console had many names like The Terminator in Serbia , Pegasus in Poland,and Dendy in Russia.My collection has about 40 carts whit about 60 different games,and a keyboard console,i stopped collecting cause the consoles don't last more than 2 years ,and i switched to original consoles that are a bit harder to find in perfect condition.And for some reason my parents are against collecting retro games.
The Sega Mega Drive 2 is onw of the better clones outta there. My console works 'till to this day and it is almost 17 years old. I would say avoid Polystation and the keyboard ones.
2:02
Derpy Hooves is on this video. a PTNP video.
My life is complete.
I just dont know what whent right 6_9
That 76 in 1 is PURE GOLD here in Argentina. A total classic.
Probably my favorite patthenespunk vid
That "Tunny" game is a sprite hack of a Famicom game called "SonSon" made by... Capcom.
This is most of what we had in Mexico. Actual US cartridges hard to find and way more expensive
Super shrek? SHUT UP AND TAKE MY 3 BUCKS!
In south America this class of games were pretty common to found (mostly for the time (2000-05) and the lack of actual SNES and other "retro consoles") i remember playing each one of this videogames in the "family game" (a mix between the famicom and the Sega genesis)
Pat, you realise that because you used Derpy pony in a video, there will be tons of questions like "Do you like MLP?" or "Are you a brony?"
My Grandparents ran a foster home in the 80's and my brother and I would go there for summer vacation and play NES and 2600 with the foster kids. Because there were so many kids living there, my Grandmother used to buy the multi carts (cause they seemed like a better deal) at a local flea market and they eventually had dozens of them. My favorite one was the "Contra 115 in 1" cart. It had your standard game set and 30 or so versions of Contra and Super C that were actually pretty cool. I really wish I could find that cartridge again.
"Gobang"
You go bang, you fucking game, don't tell me what to do.
"Gobang" = Gomoku Norabe
thepirategamerboy12
You go moku norabe. Don't tell me what to do!
Awesome video Pat, I really enjoyed it. Keep up the great work.
You're awesome, Pat. Please never stop making videos. I look forward to watching your videos quite a bit.
15:23 This is a Hack of the Capcom Game by the name of Son Son
From what I learnt from this video is that I need to play Muscle.
Actually these multicarts are common back then in my country (Indonesia)
If anyone's interested and doesn't already know, that "Ninja" game is called Ikki. It's a really early Sunsoft title. That Pikachu one is Nuts n' Milk. The first third party Famicom game. Made by Hudson. (Not a blackbox game though.) I've recently gotten totally hooked on F1 Race and Yie Ar Kung Fu. Totally awesome games. Simple and addicting. I've even fallen in love with Field Combat, a game that I used to hate as a kid. I already wrote a comment like this but it disappeared for some reason, so if someone else sees two similar from me, sorry fer spamming.
I have played most of these games when i was a kid (also from a multi cart on a famicom). Brings back memories :)
Frontline was an arcade game I used to play back in the 80's....the controller clicked in a circle which made it unique
Macross. It's Macross. Finally, after all these years of looking and wandering, now I know how this game I spent hours on as a kid was named. Thank you Pat.
all this games were all we knew here in south america, never had acces to NES, just Famicom, we call it Family Game
Pat, you must make more multicart videos! I do enjoy it, and my nostalgia was with 190 in 1.
in USSR in 1990 we had a "brand new" console "Dandy" which was a contrafact Famicom. But USSR didn't have a copyright law so The "Dandy" factory earn a great deal of money. The cartridges were all "4-in-1", "999-in-1". For the people who lived in "zx-Spectrum" era and "Atari XE/XL" era in USSR it was very strange that something outdated as "Dandy" became hit
Tunny is a hack of SonSon, a Famicom-exclusive very early Capcom game.
Ninja is Ikki, which is pretty famous among Japanese kusoge (crappy game) fans.
TwinBee is well-polished, unless you're talking about the power-up system. That is even more unforgiving than Gradius (not sure if TwinBee 3 was any better, but it wasn't until the PCE and SNES games that the designers showed some mercy)
Supposedly Jaleco planned to dress up Exerion a bit and release it on the NES in the late '80s, like they did with City Connection.
And if F1 Race got released in the US, it sounds like Nintendo would've called it Nintendo 500.
The multicarts from HK were really important to have as a kid. Without them, I would have missed out on such a plethora of classic arcade games, which were usually VERY well ported to the FC. Pac-Man, DK & DK Jr, Popeye, Galaxian, Galaga, Battle City, Dig Dug 1&2, Pooyan, Xevious, Track & Field, Mappy, Mario Bros, City Connection, Arabian, Circus Charlie, Road Fighter, MagMax, 1942, Legend of Kage, Arkanoid... all those great ports, PLUS all the console exclusive black box games were on those pirate carts. God bless them!
13:14 Fun fact: This game is is a hack of Titenic which made by Hummer Team :)
I knew I recognized that staircase.
Can't forget the flying eggplant.
Jontron bring me here for titenic lol
Te... TE.. TE... TETE... Te....... Tetinic
Macross was known in Mexico as "Robotech" Back in the 80s I spent lots of coins in Circus Charlie at the arcades. Cheers! 🥂
Was that Bubsy at the end of Super Shrek? Cheezus! ahaha
Now I want to find Super Shrek Bros. That is beautiful.
Here in Brazil we had A LOT of this catridges. Basically because NES was not officially released around here until 1993(?!) and until the date all we had were various NES clones and lots of pirated games. Life here were not easy...
well this certainly answers my questions about that mysterious 82 in 1 cart I've had since I was a kid.
=)) Super Arabian in my old multicart named Super Lesbian =))
Wow, it looks like the 44 in 1 has some Undumped pirated originals. :O
17:23 DK Jr was like "Alright, someone get Howard Lincoln on the phone pronto!"
Yay, another Pat the NES Punk episode! :>
a tomba icon?
you get a BIIIIIG cookie from me :D
I LOVE MAPPY I STILL PLAY IT TODAY
These multicarts were pretty much the only NES games you could get in Bulgaria. I've never held an original NES cartridge in my life. Or an original NES for that matter. Binary Land is actually a fun challenge.
love all your video's pat, i only found your channel a couple years ago but have returned to watch much of you new content and have watched a fair bit of older stuff. your flea market madness explanation today was sad only in that you explain what the flea markets and swap meets have come to in terms of deals and even game availability
Ah, multicarts, Philippines have lots of these in the 90s, i have multicarts too, and played them on my famicom, good times!
You're kidding! I fucking loved Mappy when I was a kid..
the bonus level is too hard
i gotta keep moving
I remember my mom and I played Twin Bee a lot on this Plug and Play we got ages ago.
I would say that the penguin is dodging seals and not walruses. It is easy to confuse them because they both are part of the Pinnipedia Family, however walruses have tusks and seals do not. Seeing that the sprite does not have tusks makes me conclude that it is infact a seal. Besides that great video.
In the 90s famicom games were super abundant in Argentina for some reason. But I knew very few people that had the original NES, mostly rich kids
I remember playing the 80 in 1 on NES. I have no idea where on earth my friend got it back then but it was released in Europe too.
I remember i got a NES "Keyboard" version with a 9999 in 1 cardrige. Best days of my childhood.
That Harry Potter game. lol
Great episode.
And it is actually a pirate hack of another pirate game called TITENIC.
Man pat u been doing "Unnecessary" Podcasts finally your back
This was really fun. I remember almost all of those games, and I think here in Argentina they were much more popular because NES systems were really expensive and the only thing we could afford was a "Family Game" (or "Family System"), which if you ask anybody who's 20+ years old is what 8bit games were played on. You say "Family" and everybody thinks of 8bit games.
So, since "Family Games" were so popular, and they were a sort of Famicom ripoff, multicarts were the norm if you were a casual player, these were either a good deal on their own or they came free when buying a new system. My dad loves Arkanoid and my mom loves Pac-Man, both of which came in these. Super Mario was the norm too.
I remember Battle City, that Arabian game, Mappy, and that... Clu-Clux-Clan game? Very weird name. Where you're kind of a fish flying around, turning with the help of poles in a map where you have to uncover a "crystal drawing" or something like that. More serious games like the Rockman series, Batman: Return of the Joker, Spider-Man and the Sinister Six and others did come in standalone cartridges and I had many of them.
I remember almost every videogame shop allowed for trading carts and everything on the market (or most of the market, at least) was copies. A bunch of cyan, pink and purple colored fake cartridges all over.
Oh, and when Sega came along it felt so unreachable! Those graphics! Those games!
It was such a different market back then, and everything arrived here several years later.
Oh my gosh... that Videovision picture. That's exactly the place I used to rent video games from. Seriously. That's awesome. The building is still there. From the last time I went in, they're still running, but no longer renting video games. I'm not sure now though. Nevertheless, that is awesome.
"This cart is shaped like an N64 cart so it's probably got new games on it"
That cart you looked before it used a screenshot from Death Note for Tennis. My question is, who the fuck would manufacture these carts for profit after 2006????
Logikz
The Famicom lasted for a lobger time in Russia and China. Thats why. They couldn't upgrade their consoles to the SNES and Nintendo wouldn't sell their products in China and Russia, so they created these multicarts and pirated games on "multicarts".
"Chack'n Pop." Sounds like an even shadier payday advance lender.
Pat, you are the master of the well timed pun.
This penguin was quite popular in Japan and in the Middle East as well as Europe back in the 80s and early 90s, he was at one point Konami's mascot.
A sequel to this game which was 1000 times better was released for the MSX named as (Penguin Adventure) in Europe, the game was Konami's answer to Super Mario Bros, and before you start making judgments, no it's not as simple as this game, in many ways it is equal to Super Mario bros in terms of quality and multiple secrets, also it had multiple endings which is something missing from Super Mario bros.
It's worth mentioning that Binary Land is one of the spin offs for this penguin, there were lots of spin offs on the Famicom and MSX for this character!
Loved the 'Clerks' reference lol
Nice Dog Beach shot at the end Pat.
My most favorite unlicensed NES Multicart was Super 190 in 1 and 260 in 1
:50 A Clerks reference, I LOVE IT!
If there's something I learnt from those multiple games in one, is that, the less games it have, the better they are.
I had a 4 in 1 cartridge once.
Twin Bee's, Megaman 4, Adventure's island IV and That hacked version of Jackie chan, but with Mario.
Good shit, that cartridge's weight was around 1 ton I think.
FYI: Among the pirated Taito, Namco & Konami titles,there were also a few from Jaleco such as Field Combat & Exerion.
Boy, i sure am BOMBING at this game.
Pat's jokes are significantly better in this episode.
I liked this review as soon as I saw the derpy hooves reference
I love that PokBMon is just Nuts and Milk with a new skin
anyone notice Pat has holy socks?...
"Pokbmon" is a hack of Nuts & Milk, the first third party Famicom title.
That Kerouac reference is wicked!
I thought I saw all the punk vids but now I'm finding more. Stupid TH-cam algorithm
The "pokemon" game that you showed is a re-skin of a famicom game called Nuts and Milk. Cheers from Japan!
The "pokemon" hack was Milk and Nuts.
Some of these Famicom games were decent though.
when i was a kid, my dad got me a multi-car that looked like a famicom game with an extra peice on it seperated by a silk ribbon of all things...see anything like this pat?
Battle City was one of most popular games in my childhood
Many years ago, I was in a game store and I noticed a GBA game called "242 in 1" might not be the exact number but my point is it's a multicart game with a bunch of NES games and some other nonsense. It's got some pretty good picks, Tengen Tetris, Megaman among others but then they have some games like Ghostbusters.
Oddly enough, I always thought the policeman in Mappy was an Elephant.
3:54 That joked really bombed
Pokemon is Nuts & Milk, the Famicom version of which never got a US release.
You cracked me up Pat! LMAO at your funny comments. I would love to find one of these with the first 5 Mario's done right for the Famicom. Just subbed bro!
My favorite part is 12:42-17:43 where Pat looks at 44 Games.
I had the 21 in one. It had some of the hack games shown but about 2/3 were existing games including the first 2 Marios, Excitebike, Galaga and Contra.
Harry's Story is actually just a reskin of an unlicensed Famicom game called Titenic.And no, Titenic is NOT a typo. Check out Jontron's channel for the original.
Super Shrek? OMG LOL
These are the games I grew up with in Turkey. I never saw original NES /SNES maybe really rich kids had those somewhere not where I lived :D These were cheap , they included all and AWESOME !
I have got a 400 in 1 and 198 in 1 famicom multicarts. They are pretty cool cause you can get to play some rare games that would be otherwise really hard to find the original cart of.