Inspirational Video Game Quotes Part Deux

Breath of Fire SNES Shoop!I felt like there needed to be a second edition once I started reminiscing. Playing roms and giggling should be shared! So here is the sequel, the quotes that I remember and love for their charm, wit, or plain old badness. Click here to see part one.
– – – – –

 
“Hmm, don’t have time to play with myself!”
– Duke Nukem 3d, Duke Nukem said when using action button on arcade game of the same name (PC)

Chrono Trigger SNES Nu

 
Guybrush: “You fight like a Dairy Farmer!”
Pirate: “How appropriate, you fight like a Cow!”
– Guybrush Threepwood, Monkey Island 1: The Secrey of Monkey Island (PC)

 
“Hmm, a rubber chicken with a pulley in the middle. What possible use could that have?”
– Guybrush Threepwood, Monkey Island 1: The Secrey of Monkey Island (PC)

Breath of Fire 2 SNES Die

 
“Am I butterfly dreaming I’m a man? Or a bowling ball dreaming I’m a plate of sashimi? Never assume what you see and feel is real!” – Doreen, Chrono Trigger (SNES)

Dragon Warrior 4 NES Counter

 
“In our world, every storm has an end. Every night brings a new day. What’s important is to trust those you love, and never give up. We must never give up hope!” – Priestess in the Cathedral, Chrono Trigger (SNES)

 
“How do I get out of this chicken outfit?!” – Marine, StarCraft (PC)

 
“I really have to go… number one.” – Battle Cruiser, StarCraft (PC)

Dragon Warrior 3 NES Pepper

 
“E=MC… d’oh let me get my notepad.” – Science Vessel, StarCraft (PC)

 
“This is not Warcraft in space!” – Artanis, StarCraft (PC)

 
“Besides humans, dogs also sleep at night. Why aren’t you asleep?” – Dog, Earthbound (SNES)

 
“Run, run, or you’ll be well done!” – Kefka, Final Fantasy 3 (SNES) 6 (PS)

Earthbound SNES Nausea

 
“I hate hate hate hate hate hate hate hate hate hate hate hate HATE YOU!!” – Kefka, Final Fantasy 3 (SNES) 6 (PS)

 
“Terra. . . Please wait for me. . . And. . . please. . . don’t let a lecherous young king, who shall remain nameless, near you!” – Locke Cole, Final Fantasy 3 (SNES) 6 (PS)

 
“Thou are so… odd.” – Cyan, Final Fantasy 3 (SNES) 6 (PS)

Final Fantasy 1 NES FIEND

 
“I’m working for the Empire. But, don’t worry… I’m not going to garrote you!” – Shadow, Final Fantasy 3 (SNES) 6 (PS

 
“This monkey’s going to give you a spanking, Shupkay!” – Sten, Breath of Fire 2 (SNES)

 
Natsume: “Thanks! But I have nothing to give you in return..except, maybe myself…”
Kite: “WHAT?!?!”
Natsume: “No! I meant I could help you out if you need it…”
– .hack//MUTATION (PS2)

Goonies 2 NES Ouch What

 
Man: “Here’s your question. ‘What’s the secret to success in business?'”
Hero: “…”
Man: “That’s right! Silence. Silence is golden.”
Hero: “?”
– Dragon Warrior 4 (NES)

 
“Sure.. hope this is not… Chris’s blood.”
– Barry says stilted like Kirk in Star Trek, Resident Evil (PS)

Lufia 2 SNES Master Catfish

 
“One more wrong move and you would of been a Jill sandwich”
– Barry says to Jill, Resident Evil (PS)

 
“That’s a face only a sledgehammer could love, and has!” – Morte, AD&D: Planescape: Torment (PC)

 
Fall-from-Grace: “You know, Nordrom, you are perhaps the cutest little rogue modron I have ever encountered.”
Nordom: “‘Cutest’ is a subjective term. I prefer the designation ‘fearsome clubed warrior’.”
Fall-from-Grace: “Of course! That’s why you’re so cute.”
– AD&D: Planescape: Torment (PC)

Lufia 2 SNES Master Monster or Human

 
Nordom: “A query, Annah: is your tail’s purpose to indicate your current level of hostility?”
Annah: *angrily* “What kind of stupid question is that you pikin’ sod box?”
Nordom: “My analysis is correct. Danger! Danger!”
– AD&D: Planscape: Torment (PC)

 
Morte: “Hey Nordom, knock-knock.”
Nordom: “Why do you persist in addressing me as a door?”
Morte: “It’s a joke, you stupid polygon! You’re supposed to answer ‘Who’s there?'”
Nordom: “I know who is there. It is you. Why would I ask a question when I already know the answer?”
Morte: “Just forget it.”
– AD&D: Planescape: Torment (PC)

Lufia 2 SNES Confront Swell

– – – – –

 
Let me end this with a quote about video games from the once upon a time president of the USA, Ronald Reagan made August 8, 1983:

“I recently learned something quite interesting about video games. Many young people have developed incredible hand, eye, and brain coordination in playing these games. The air force believes these kids will be our outstanding pilots should they fly our jets.”
Final Fantasy 2 SNES 4 PS Dwarves

 
So let us fly their jets.

 
Screen shots from the top:
Breath of Fire (SNES)
Chrono Trigger (SNES)
Breath of Fire 2 (SNES)
Dragon Warrior 4 (NES)
Dragon Warrior 3 (NES)
Earthbound (SNES)
Final Fantasy 1 (NES)
Goonies 2 (NES)
(next three) Lufia 2: Rise of the Sinistrals (SNES)
Final Fantasy 2 (SNES) 4 (PS)

Inspirational Video Game Quotes

Monkey Island I: The Secret of Monkey Island
I know everyone is all ‘up on’ the “All your base are belong to us” bandwagon, but the list of wonderfully bad (by bad, I mean good) video game quotes is long. I have read it over the years on my television and computer screens and laughed until everyone around me was embarrassed for me. I’ve picked a few games and a few favorites from those games.
Final Fantasy 3 SNES (6 Playstation) Locke Cole“Some of these are mistranslated, badly translated, or just products of brain damaged programmers (or translators, or both). Enjoy!



Yeah, this kid seems loaded for bear.” said about Terra who is using magic.

-Locke Cole, Final Fantasy VI (III US), SNES & PSX


Earthbound: SNES
“Knights do it two-handed.”

– townsman, Final Fantasy V, PSX


“This isn’t a leotard, it’s our combat uniform!”

– various amazon warriors of Toroia, Final Fantasy IV (II US), SNES & PSX


Final Fantasy 4 Play Station (2 SNES) Tellah speaking to Edward
“There are secrets where faeries don’t live.”

– old man, The Legend of Zelda, NES


“Whoah, are you still playing this thing?” said at the last level.

– Bubsy, Bubsy, SNES (note: not written on screen, but said)

Legend of Zelda II: The Adventure of Link (NES)“Even a door of this caliber can’t keep science at bay!”

– Lucca, Chrono Trigger, SNES



“No rubbish for Ayla, or head go boom!”

– Ayla, Chrono Trigger, SNES

Final Fantasy I: NES
“I’d rather have my gums scraped!”

– The Girl (main character), Secret of Mana, SNES



“Don’t be a tuna head.”

– Fred, Maniac Mansion, Atari ST & PC



“Grass green? I hate that color!”

– Bobbon, Loom, PC


King's Quest VI
“So you want to be a pirate, eh? You look more like a flooring inspector.”

– Blind Man, Monkey Island I: The Secret of Monkey Island, PC



“I’m looking for 30 dead guys and one woman.”

– Guybrush Threepwood, Monkey Island I: The Secret of Monkey Island, PC


Chrono Trigger: SNES

Guybrush: “How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?”

Carpenter: “A woodchuck would chuck no amount of wood since a woodchuck can’t chuck wood.”

Guybrush: “But if a woodchuck could chuck and would chuck some amount of wood, what amount of wood would a woodchuck chuck?”

Carpenter: “Even if a woodchuck could chuck wood and even if a woodchuck would chuck wood, should a woodchuck chuck wood?”

Guybrush: “A woodchuck should chuck wood if a woodchuck could chuck wood, as long as a woodchuck would chuck wood.”

Carpenter: “Oh shut up.”

– Monkey Island II: LeChuck’s Revenge, PC


Earthbound: SNES in an elevator
“¡Madre de Dios! ¡Es el Pollo Diablo! (“Mother of God! It’s the Devil Chicken!”)” Guybrush, tarred and feathered, responds in Spanish, which makes it funnier.

– Guybrush Threepwood, Monkey Island III: The Curse of Monkey Island, PC



Earthbound: SNES with a COW
The screen shots (from the top) are:
Monkey Island I,
Earthbound (SNES),
Final Fantasy III (SNES) / VI (PSX),
Earthbound (again),
Final Fantasy II (SNES) / IV (PSX),
The Legend of Zelda: The Adventure of Link (NES),
Final Fantasy (NES),
King’s Quest VI (PC),
Chrono Trigger (SNES),
Earthbound (and again),
and Earthbound (yet again)



So, anyone like to share any of their own personal favorites? Try to tell us: who said it, what game, and what platform. Anyone can recite “All your base…”. I’m more interested in memories of a gamer’s greatest moments grimacing or guffawing at the ‘puter screen (or tv).

Your Least Favorite Holiday

It’s hard not to go through this time of year without hearing how much people hate Christmas. It’s expensive. It’s stressful. You don’t know what to get people. You don’t get what you want, and you wonder why you couldn’t just buy what you wanted or save the money. The person who hated your gift wonders the same.

Still, I enjoy aspects of this holiday. If you have younger people in your life, it’s easy to feed off of their excitement. I spend Christmas as my parent’s house, sleeping in my little brother’s top bunk. He’s so excited, it takes him forever to fall asleep. Last year was the first year he didn’t spend hours rolling around and occasionally asking ‘Is it morning yet?’, and this was because we stayed up until midnight playing Halo 2 together.

I’m not sure I like getting gifts for people, but I do love watching them open something when you know that they’re going to love it, or are surprised to get it, especially when they weren’t expecting anything. I like watching people open gifts that aren’t from me. It’s mystery.

Yankee swaps (also known as Bad Santa) are great if you do them with the right people. I like them for some of the same reasons: excitement and mystery. But, the real key is humor. It’s not about the gifts being good, it’s about the game. The gift is having a fun time with a group of people that you wouldn’t normally play a game with. One time at a Yankee Swap I brought a pudding cup. I thought I would be shafting someone, but lo and behold, the spirit of the game was there. Everyone wanted this chocolate pudding cup. The person with number one chose it. People mock fighting over a pudding cup was quite entertaining. This game goes awry when someone gets a gift taken away, or gets something crappy, and takes it personally.

That’s a big problem with this holiday. People take it personally when you have a hard time getting them the ‘right thing’ as if there is such a thing. Even if you know a person, you don’t necessarily know their materialistic desires.

But still, the food and drink is always good at least at one of the parties, and maybe more. Besides, there are worse holidays. My least favorite comes right before my birthday, and I have a hard time thinking of any redeeming qualities. Yes, Yuletide has its flaws, but I think Valentines Day is really the worst holiday of them all. Let me take you through a brief history explaining why.

Valentines day is a trip to the drugstore. Pick out a pink box with the least repulsive cartoon characters on it. Quiz yourself on what the names of all the people in your class are, and write them on perforated cardboard. Write your own name on the other line, again and again. It’s like homework. Do I really have to give one to everyone? Yes, I should, because otherwise I probably wouldn’t get many. They’re like cheap baseball cards for yourself. Collect the whole class. The best ones have candy taped on them. They all loose their pizzazz in a day or two and end up in the trash.

Fast forward in the years and we come to Valentines day yet again: the day to feel lonely. Sure, it’s lonely on the Fourth of July when you see a couple leaning to like the poles to a tent under the stars of fireworks, but the barbeque is good and the family still loves you. By the time you reach adulthood, dad stops giving you the candy and the cards- ‘my little girl’, ‘daddy’s sweetheart’ at Valentines. I say fuck it all, the myth of love, and put on the Rocky Horror Picture show. I’m lucky. Transvestite aliens could be holding me captive. I show myself what I rather don’t want to know about Valentines Day.

Years pass, and I find out. We both say we don’t believe in this commercial crap holiday. Then I get you nothing and you show up with a present. Valentines day is about one half making the other half feel inadequate. Saying I love you doesn’t need a special day. Doing something special is always on my mind and in my actions. So why do you do this? I feel this way every year, at the special dinner on that day or close to it. Then one year you’re not there near Valentines, and I receive a build-a-bear in the mail. It says “I miss you so much. Here’s a friend.” I should have been able to predict this was the last year you’d be with me- the last year you’d care to secretly plan something even after we said we wouldn’t. Valentines day is a poorly disguised litmus test.

Love is a lying whore and Valentines is her unholy holiday. This year I make a point to go to a hard rock music show with a friend. Yes, we found one in Portland, Maine. I say she’s my date and make a point to not let any guy get too close without my flailing fists connecting. I indiscriminately piss off a couple of made up monsters who attend the show for the attention to show them a good time. Shows are for dancing, loosing control- letting loose the love lost- fighting the fury of being found, fucking, and being left lost again. Plenty of people understand and give me grins for my moshing, pats on the back, past backing their reactions to my rawness. But if so many understand, then why do I continue to wander from Valentines to Valentines like this, along with the others, but alone? Why is connection so critical and still so easily erased, wantonly walking away unaware of what once was?

My friend elbowed me in the teeth- not on purpose, but full of rapture in song. The sets were done several songs too soon. Of all the loves I miss, I miss music the most when the night is still young and the floor clears; the cardboard figure destroyed with a claymore is removed. I briefly connect eyes with a few friends of someone I once saw for a few weeks. I avoid the gaze of one who wanted to bed me while I thought he wanted something more. He tends to one of the attention monsters. So suddenly my sanctuary crumbles and I stumble outside to the pavement, little sound left after ears are left humming. I’m still sober, but something slips into my step that bore confidence before Valentines day.

I’ll be okay in the morning, until next Valentines Day.

Read Less – Learn More

This is what it says on the cover of my new text book. I know I shouldn’t be judging a book by its cover, but it gets better on the inside.

This text contains VALUABLE knowledge…

…for people who are just turning on a computer for the first time. It covers using Windows XP. Subjects include:

  • Using a Mouse With Windows XP (…becuase using it with any other OS is different, especially if you’ve used Macs that sometimes have one button and sometimes two. So confusing!)
  • Understanding Pull Down Menus (Which you… drum roll… yes! Pull down. Glad you understand all that.)
  • 16 pages on Using Microsoft Paint (Because you have it in your head that using Adobe Photoshop is going to get you somewhere! Phht!)
  • Adjusting the Volume (Because computers don’t all have remote controls!)
  • Deleting a File (…)
  • Starting Internet Explorer (You mean other than to look at how badly it handles css?)
  • Understanding the Internet (First of all, the internet is a series of tubes… (see 3d pipe screen saver for an example, and btw, having that as your screen saver makes the internet run better))

I understand that they got us this textbook just in case someone didn’t know how to draw a rectangle in paint (Gasp! Glad we rectified that.), but seriously, anyone that needs this book is likely going to drop out in about a week. Why encourage them? Let them save time, money, gas, breathing air for the rest of us…

Maybe that’s a bit harsh. Maybe I will be surprised and awed by someone who goes from needing this book to building their own firewalls from scratch in mere months. It could happen.

Does anyone out there remember the Bastard System Operator From Hell Simon Travaglia? He would have some fun with those people.

I haven’t read any of those stories since I was using BBSes. Apparently they continued to be written. I guess I have some research- I mean pleasure reading to do. ;) After all, I’m reading, so I’m probably learning less…

Life as a Text Adventure

Recently on Neopoleon, the blog of one Rory Blyth, Betsy Aoki brought up writing a ‘choose your own adventure’ game back in the day.

We all think that ‘back in the day’ is something grand whether we’re in our twenties or seventies. I remember text adventures and think, “Wow, that was great… playing Guild of Theives on the Atari ST!”. I might even have the Bank of Kerovnia account card and Kerovnia Guild of Discret Entry And Removal Operatives contract pasted in an old jounal somewhere. Bank of Kerovnia Account Card

Video games are fun and recreation. Often times a video gamer thinks to themselves “I wish life were more like a video game”. You have multiple lives, the reset button, gain experience and gold for beating things, magic, and strange old women/men in huts who give you things. Yes, life would be better with these video game elements.

But would life be better as a text adventure?

Let’s find out.

“You find yourself in your bedroom, awake, but groggy. Exits are to the north.”
Go north.
“That’s kind of hard considering you’re laying down.”
Get up.
“I do not understand.”
Go up.
“Do you think you have the powers of flight?”
Go out of bed.
“Ok.”
Go north.
“Ok.”
Look.
“You are in the live-in-kitchen. Your cat runs north. There is a laptop sitting on the counter. An Ethernet cable dangles nearby. Exits are to the north.”
Get laptop.
“I do not understand.”
Use laptop with Ethernet cable.
“Okay.”
Use laptop.
“You must open it first!”
Open laptop.
“Okay.”
Use laptop.
“You must turn it on first!”
Turn on laptop.
“I do not understand.”
Turn on laptop.
“I do not understand.”
Look laptop.
“The laptop is OPEN. There is a blank screen, keys, a touchpad, and an on/off button.”
Use on/off button.
“Okay.”
Look laptop.
“The laptop is OPEN. There is something displayed on the screen, keys, a touchpad, and an on/off button.”
Look screen.

Sans nostalgia, text adventures were nothing more than an exercise in frustration. Though I was taught about synonyms, spelling, and thinking/writing like a programmer, I am very glad I can now simply point and click characters to their destination or use the d-pad on a controller.

If life were really like a text adventure…

Jump out window.

“You must first open the window.”

Open window.

“Okay.”

Jump out window.

“Why would you want to do that?”

Go window.

“I do not understand.”

Use self with window.

“I do not understand.”