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''Wayne's World'' is an action video game based on the film of the same name and released in 1993 by
THQ THQ Inc. was an American video game company based in Agoura Hills, California. It was founded in April 1990 by Jack Friedman, originally in Calabasas, and became a public company the following year through a reverse merger takeover. Initi ...
. Different versions of the game were released; the
NES The Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) is an 8-bit third-generation home video game console produced by Nintendo. It was first released in Japan in 1983 as the commonly known as the The NES, a redesigned version, was released in American ...
and
Game Boy The is an 8-bit fourth generation handheld game console developed and manufactured by Nintendo. It was first released in Japan on April 21, 1989, in North America later the same year, and in Europe in late 1990. It was designed by the same t ...
games were developed by
Radical Entertainment Radical Entertainment Inc. is a Canadian video game developer based in Vancouver. The studio is best known for developing '' The Simpsons: Hit & Run'', '' Prototype'' and ''Prototype 2'', as well as entries in the ''Crash Bandicoot'' franchise ...
and feature both protagonists
Wayne and Garth "Wayne's World" was originally a recurring sketch from the NBC television series ''Saturday Night Live''. It evolved from a segment titled "Wayne's Power Minute" (1987) on the CBC Television series '' It's Only Rock & Roll'', as the main charact ...
as playable characters. The
Super NES The Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES), commonly shortened to Super NES or Super Nintendo, is a 16-bit home video game console developed by Nintendo that was released in 1990 in Japan and South Korea, 1991 in North America, 1992 in ...
and Sega Mega Drive/Genesis games were developed by Gray Matter and feature only Wayne as a playable character.


Gameplay and premise


NES

The NES version keeps true to the plot of the original film, as the premise involves Wayne and Garth trying to stop a rich producer from buying their public access television show. The first level takes place at Kramer's Music Store, where Wayne fights several sentient instruments to obtain the Excallbur, such as guitars, drums, cymbals, saxophone, trumpets, and stacks of Barry Manilow records. In the second level, Wayne and Garth go to the Gasworks to battle bouncers, martial artists, and tough guys in order to meet Cassandra, who is performing with her band at the venue. Following this encounter, Garth fights ninjas and black cats in an alleyway (level three) while Wayne takes on security guards, floating television screens, black spiders, and power cords at Ben's studio to find the show contract. However, he fails to find it and, in the next level, goes to Ben's condo where not only does he try to get the contract but also save Cassandra from the producer. There's a time limit to completing each stage. The player controls both characters, each with different attacks; Wayne uses karate kicks learned by his girlfriend Cassandra, and Garth is equipped with a 4000-volt laser gun. Both characters can duck, jump regularly, and do a "cool major-high flip jump" activated by pressing A and up on the D-pad. The player starts the game with four lives and 22 "worthiness" units representing
health Health, according to the World Health Organization, is "a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity".World Health Organization. (2006)''Constitution of the World Health Organiza ...
points. Worthiness points can increase by collecting donuts and P power-ups that are garnered by killing enemies. The P power-ups include two extra worthiness units and strengthen the power of Wayne and Garth's attacks, giving Wayne 20 "roundhouse kicks" and Garth 20 100-gigawatt blasts. After completing each level, there's a bonus level consisting of several donuts for the player to collect; if all donuts are garnered, the player will receive an extra life.


Super NES

At Noah's Arcade, Wayne and Garth get sucked into the game ''Zantar'' where Garth is captured by the titular purple gelatinous cube. In rescuing his friend, Wayne traverses through four levels, each surrealist versions of places he encounters in real life. Along the way, Wayne is equipped with a guitar weapon that can be power-up'd with amps that execute larger chords, "chorus" power-ups that allow for three-chords to be played on screen at a time, a "distortion" icon that makes the chords move in "a distorted path," and a "homer" power-up that move towards enemies. Other items Wayne can collect include "Schwing" items that obliterate all enemies currently on the screen, a thumbs-up icon increasing the player's "worthiness" level (although it's unknown and not explained in the manual what that is), hearts that serve as extra lives, and additional guitar items that increase the amount of notes Wayne can play at a time. The first level is Kramer's Music Store, where many instruments coming to life going after Wayne; these includes accordions, trombones, shooting floating bagpipes, clarinets that shoot missiles from off screen, drums, falling guitars, kazoos that charge in swarms, cellos that attack with bows, and saxophones. In the second level, Wayne finds himself shrank at Stan Mikita's Donut Shop, with enemies like donut monsters, coffee cups, grease, steam blasts, and falling sugar cups attacking him. What follows is the third level, Wayne and Garth's favorite nightclub named the Gasworks, where sentient objects continue to serve as enemies; these include darts, bar stools, shooting disco balls, "rock 'n roll boots," gas jets, "six-legged Beatles," and shooting Yellow Submarines. Wayne also faces human bouncers in the level. The final level is a fantasy version of a suburb Wayne used to live in, where he has a showdown with Zantar and saves Garth.


Reception

Jonathan Davies of '' Super Play'', reviewing the SNES version, was bored with it, describing its gameplay as only "jumping around collecting things" with the only appealing factors being its voice samples and Wayne and Garth's faces. '' Computer Gaming World'' stated in 1993 that the PC version of "''Wayne's World'' is, like, fun, man". The magazine recommended the game to those new to adventures, who would enjoy a "rather typical" game with "good humor, unexpected twists, and an odd setting". Describing it as "bogus", a later review in the magazine advised against ''Wayne's World'' as an introductory adventure game for children. Commenting on the NES version, '' GamePro''s Data Carvey praised the game's humor, such as with its enemies, between-level cutscenes, and manual, but panned its perceived lack of difficulty and poor presentation; he wrote that the enemies were easily beatable, the backgrounds and sprites were "undetailed" and "flat," and its audio consisted of a "pretty cheesy soundtrack" and sparse sound effects reminiscent of games from the 1980s. ''Super Pro''s Sam Hickman named ''Wayne's World'' the worst SNES game of 1993. In 1995, Flux magazine ranked Wayne’s World 19th on their 25 All Time Worst Video Games. Conversely, Brazilian magazine Ação Games, gave the SNES game a fun rating of 4/4, praising the graphics, sound, and the richness of items.


Notes


Other games

An adventure game based on the film was released for personal computers by
Capstone CAPSTONE (Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System Technology Operations and Navigation Experiment) is a lunar orbiter that will test and verify the calculated orbital stability planned for the Lunar Gateway space station. The spacecraft is a 12- ...
.
Argonaut The Argonauts (; Ancient Greek: ) were a band of heroes in Greek mythology, who in the years before the Trojan War (around 1300 BC) accompanied Jason to Colchis in his quest to find the Golden Fleece. Their name comes from their ship, ''Argo'', n ...
was also developing a version for the unreleased Super NES CD-ROM upgrade.An Interview with Argonaut Software. Electronic Gaming Monthly, May 1993. Page 111. Nothing is known of the gameplay, just that Argonaut planned to include footage from the movie and "a lot of heavy metal music".


References


Citations


Bibliography

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External links


''Wayne's World''
at MobyGames {{Wayne's World 1993 video games Game Boy games Nintendo Entertainment System games Super Nintendo Entertainment System games THQ games Platform games Side-scrolling video games Video games based on films Video games developed in Canada Wayne's World Single-player video games