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57 Things We Know From Playing Video Games

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  • 20-09-2007 9:27am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 5,963 ✭✭✭


    I came across this on another forum and thought it was worth sharing :D


    1. When you're about to beat someone in a fight, they will rapidly flash between red and their normal skin tone.

    2. Chickens are easy to pick up.

    3. Tennis is really easy.

    4. Hockey is almost entirely about checking and fist-fights.

    5. Most people don't say anything of interest.

    6. On any given day, a 16-year old girl can beat up a gigantic bear, or an old man can beat up a robot.

    7. The best way to open a container is to destroy it.

    8. When you enter a town, the person closest to the entrance will welcome you to the town and tell you its name.

    9. When driving, a full 360 flip is routine, provided you land wheels down.

    10. Pay attention to shiny things.

    11. All ninjas will try to kill you on sight. Unless said ninja is a super badass ninja who refuses to talk. That guy will run away after saying "..." But beware--he'll be back.

    12. Parachutes are standard issue for all soldiers, regardless of what they're tasked with on the Battlefield.

    13. Food heals all wounds.

    14. Eating typically takes one or two seconds, and can usually be accomplished by standing on top of food.

    15. If you run out of bullets, you die.

    16. Everyone, everywhere, at anytime is capable of jumping at least 5 feet straight up.

    17. Eating mushrooms can make you grow taller. Eating flowers let you shoot fireballs out of your hand.

    18. Female martial artists are either little girls in Japanese school clothes, or scantily clad vixens with ginormous boobies.

    19. The Web was basically built for people to play puzzle games and tower defense.

    20. Windows sucks.

    21. Your thumb is your most powerful weapon.

    22. Pokemon, though vicious fighting animals, will only attack other Pokemon. Even the biggest, nastiest Pokemon won't hurt a human.

    23. Princess Peach really needs a security staff.

    24. And so does Princess Zelda.

    25. Most people don't mind if you wander into their house unannounced. They also don't care if you go rifling through their chests and barrels looking for items.

    26. A large number of doors and gates are controlled by elaborate pulley systems involving statues and clay tablets.

    27. Barrels with radioactive signs on the side will explode if shot.

    28. Hemorrhaging head wounds can be healed by standing on top of any box with the red cross symbol on the side.

    29. Bad guys and monsters tend to enjoy carrying around the same types of bullets your guns use, even if they themselves are not armed.

    30. Big ass boobs are great. 3D big ass boobs with a proper physics engine behind them are even better.

    31. Massive boobs do not, in anyway, interfere with physical and athletic performance.

    32. Most cities, though appearing large, are composed of small alleys and single streets blocked off at both ends by garbage, fences, cars, or mysterious invisible barriers.

    33. 90% of all doors are completely fake. They're just painted onto the wall.

    34. Solid Snake's co-workers are completely incapable of shutting the f**k up.

    35. Turtles come out of their shells if you press down hard on them. Additionally, turtle shells are really slick on the bottom, and thus they slide around on normal surfaces as though they were ice.

    36. For the most part, jumping on something's head will kill it. If it does not, then throwing a dead animal at the thing will do the job.

    37. All adventures will take the protagonist through an "ice world."

    38. If you get poisoned, you won't die as long as you stay still.

    40. Grenades are easy to locate in major metropolitan areas. And in fields. And in suburbs. And in airbases. And in hotels. And on the bus. And in schools. But if you find grenades in a military base, they're probably fake and don't really exist.

    41. 95% of all computers, desks, tables and chairs are exactly the same.

    42. Killing people makes you stronger.

    43. When someone dies, their body will decompose within 5 minutes of death.

    44. Dead people, after decomposition, tend to leave behind weapons, food, or keys.

    45. Bad guys like to build elaborate mazes around their headquarters.

    46. The head guy involved in anything is usually trying to destroy the world.

    47. Bad guy managers are usually far stronger than any of their underlings.

    48. If a bad guy is really really big, you'll have to flip a number of switches in order to damage him. These switches will always reset within 30 seconds of being hit, making Mr. Big Baddy invulnerable again.

    49. The more you kill, the better the stuff you get.

    50. All store owners will buy any old crap you have in your bag, no matter how much of it you own.

    51. If in combat, your enemies will usually stand around and wait patiently as you go through your rucksack looking for your rocket launcher.

    52. A knife in the back beats three bullets in the face.

    53. When you go to bed at an inn, a 3-second jingle will play before you go to sleep..

    54. Hedgehogs do not have blood flowing through their veins, but giant gold rings.

    55. The greatest of warriors often communicates in childish aphorisms.

    56. Clothing only comes in one size.

    57. If you come across a locked door, you have to find the key, even if it's a brittle piece of wood that a grenade should be able to obliterate.


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 3,766 ✭✭✭Reku


    58. When we colonise space we'll wait a few hundred years before we stripmine the colonised systems for all their worth, just long enough for some space adventurers and pirates to get set up.

    59. Being god is only temporary.

    60. On your birthday you get to pick a new skill and boost your attributes.

    61. As long as you remember to update your diary regularly dying is not that big a deal.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 760 ✭✭✭TheAlmightyArse


    62. If you repaint your car, the police will forget you ever existed.

    63. Swords, bows, boomerangs, horses, grappling hooks and explosives are so easy to use, a young child can become proficient with them within seconds of coming across them for the very first time.

    64. The quickest way to get to your destination is to run diagonally.

    65. Stand in front of Natalya so she doesn't get shot to pieces, the daft bint.

    66. Espionage agents spend all day hiding in a box, engaging in endless phone conversations. This is brilliantly artistic.

    67. Chicks dig moustaches.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,561 ✭✭✭Rhyme


    D.T. Jesus wrote:
    25. Most people don't mind if you wander into their house unannounced. They also don't care if you go rifling through their chests and barrels looking for items.
    Garretts principle emot-idontknow.gif

    68. Weapons float.

    69. Members of elite police strike teams are kleptomaniac magpies [see no.10]

    70. Mixing red plants with green plants can save your life.

    71. Anyone can fly a helicopter.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 499 ✭✭Gizzle


    Off topic lads, that's more than 57 things.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 51,410 CMod ✭✭✭✭Retr0gamer


    72. Got a dull rural lifestyle that you think will never end? Don't worry by the time you are 17 your village will be attacked by ravenous monsters/bad men and it will be up to you to save the world. It's your destiny you see.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 18,707 ✭✭✭✭K.O.Kiki


    Retr0gamer wrote:
    72. Got a dull rural lifestyle that you think will never end? Don't worry by the time you are 17 your village will be attacked by ravenous monsters/bad men and it will be up to you to save the world. It's your destiny you see.
    Doesn't Harvest Moon break rule 72?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 499 ✭✭Gizzle


    K.O.Kiki wrote:
    Doesn't Harvest Moon break rule 72?

    See Rune Factory.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 51,410 CMod ✭✭✭✭Retr0gamer


    K.O.Kiki wrote:
    Doesn't Harvest Moon break rule 72?

    Harvest Moon was far from dull ;)


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,766 ✭✭✭Reku


    73 The game is always better than the film based upon the game.

    74 Attempting to shoot things off your field of view reloads guns.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,005 ✭✭✭Creature


    75. You'd think that in a battle a tank would always win over a spearman, you'd be wrong.

    76. The easiest way to settle a feud is to organise a fighting tournament.

    77. Participants of said tournament usually include a guy in a white karate outfit and at least one freak.

    78. Almost everyone speaks Japanese or with an American accent, irrelevant of their nationality.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 14,317 ✭✭✭✭Raam


    79. 10 guys with handguns can blow up a tank


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,333 ✭✭✭Zambia


    80: After having your heart re-started in battle you are fighting fit in 2 seconds...


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 51,410 CMod ✭✭✭✭Retr0gamer


    81: Pharmaceutical companies aren't evil because of their 'treatment is more profitable than cure policies' or their disregard for the treatment 3rd world diseases. They are evil because some day soon they will bring about the apocalypse by starting a zombie outbreak.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,304 ✭✭✭✭koneko


    82. Don't go near dead bodies, they're probably zombies, and start gnawing at your leg.

    83. Don't trust midgets on unicycles, or mimes, and fear the worst if you see a midget mime.

    84. Fields and pots are the best places to hide money, apparantly.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,995 ✭✭✭✭Cuddlesworth


    85: You can still run around after being shot over 300 times in 1 hour.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,766 ✭✭✭Reku


    86. When facing an entire legion of enemies a shotgun is no-where near as effective as a chainsaw.

    87. When the lights flick off and come back on again (e.g. last orders in the pub) be careful as a previously secret spot has probably unlocked, freeing the enemies that were trapped therein.

    88. The floating hand in the old lotto ads was just a god interacting with the world; probably trying to get a giant animal to eat the person it pointed at.

    91. Never trust any leader who thinks green crystals are a great thing.

    92. Cooking spices grow in the desert sands and are guarded by huge earthworms.

    93. When a combat unit is attacked the enemy will always attack them one at a time until it has insufficient strength left to kill the one it faces, then they'll rest and let said unit use the same method of attack.

    97. Negotiation is best done between two people with abnormally long arms.


    *Edited numbers to allow for the fact that more had been added to the list when I took to long to edit. :(


  • Registered Users Posts: 888 ✭✭✭Merrick


    89: It is possible to pull a seemingly endless array of weapons, ammo, grenades, armour, and various other items out of thin air, or a small rucksack.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,393 ✭✭✭✭Vegeta


    90. In future wars, weapons designers are extremely incompetent, arming the soldiers with guns that need at least 2 or 3 clips of ammunition fired in the enemies upper body and head to kill them. They never seem to learn that these weapons are ineffective either, repeating the mistake over and over.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 51,410 CMod ✭✭✭✭Retr0gamer


    94. Even if you have 3 green bright lightbulbs strapped to your head, nobody will be able to see you in the shadows.

    Edit: Creepy


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,005 ✭✭✭Creature


    95. Enemy soldiers/guards will never think of looking under a cardboard box.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 888 ✭✭✭Merrick


    96: You can remain hidden from guards and cameras by standing still in a corner until they go away. This is because guards have a visibility range of only 90 degrees, even if they are genetically enhanced.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 51,410 CMod ✭✭✭✭Retr0gamer


    97. Your enemy will never die the first time. They will either come back in a more mutated version or use a bigger vehicle.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,372 ✭✭✭The Bollox


    98. as long as you are holding atleast one big golden ring you are invincable... except for drowning


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,963 ✭✭✭GhostInTheRuins


    99. When one of your friends is kidnapped and taken to a scary mansion, it's a much better idea to gather local nerds and surfer dudes to sneak into the mansion than to call the police.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,848 ✭✭✭Fnz


    It's a good list so far. I don't think I messed up the numbering much worse than it was already. :D

    Here's an old list of truths I had saved on my hard drive (for some reason). Here's the site I must have got it from: [credit]. You'll have to forgive me for any duplicates...

    (no. 117 is prolly my favourite)

    101. Sleepyhead Rule
    Typically, the teenaged male lead will begin the first day of the game by oversleeping, being woken up by his mother, and being reminded that he's slept in so late he missed meeting his girlfriend.

    102. "No! My beloved peasant village!"
    The hero's home town, city, slum, or planet will usually be annihilated in a spectacular fashion before the end of the game, and often before the end of the opening scene.

    103. Carl Macek's Revenge
    The English voice acting is always embarrassingly bad, and the more VA there is in the game, the worse it gets.

    104. Silent Movie Rule
    Nobody ever talks during an full-motion-video sequence... thankfully, given Carl Macek's Revenge.

    105. Thinking With The Wrong Head (Hiro Rule)
    No matter what she's accused of doing or how mysterious her origins are, the hero will always be ready to fight to the death for any girl he met three seconds ago.

    106. Cubic Zirconium Corollary
    The aforementioned mysterious girl will be wearing a pendant that will ultimately prove to be the key to either saving the world or destroying it.

    107. Logan's Run Rule
    RPG characters are young. Very young. The average age seems to be 15, unless the character is a decorated and battle-hardened soldier, in which case he might even be as old as 18. Such teenagers often have skills with multiple weapons and magic, years of experience, and never ever worry about their parents telling them to come home from adventuring before bedtime. By contrast, characters more than twenty-two years old will cheerfully refer to themselves as washed-up old fogies and be eager to make room for the younger generation.

    108. Single Parent Rule
    RPG characters with two living parents are almost unheard of. As a general rule, male characters will only have a mother, and female characters will only have a father. The missing parent either vanished mysteriously and traumatically several years ago or is never referred to at all. Frequently the main character's surviving parent will also meet an awkward end just after the story begins, thus freeing him of inconvenient filial obligations.

    109. Some Call Me... Tim?
    Good guys will only have first names, and bad guys will only have last names. Any bad guy who only has a first name will become a good guy at some point in the game. Good guys' last names may be mentioned in the manual but they will never be referred to in the story.

    110. The Compulsories
    There's always a fire dungeon, an ice dungeon, a sewer maze, a misty forest, a derelict ghost ship, a mine, a glowing crystal maze, an ancient temple full of traps, a magic floating castle, and a technological dungeon.


    111. Luddite Rule (or, George Lucas Rule)
    Speaking of which, technology is inherently evil and is the exclusive province of the Bad Guys. They're the ones with the robots, factories, cyberpunk megalopolises and floating battle stations, while the Good Guys live in small villages in peaceful harmony with nature. (Although somehow your guns and/or heavily armed airships are exempted from this.)

    112. Let's Start From The Very Beginning (Megaman Rule)
    Whenever there is a sequel to an RPG that features the same main character as the previous game, that character will always start with beginner skills. Everything that they learned in the previous game will be gone, as will all their ultra-powerful weapons and equipment.

    113. Garrett's Principle
    Let's not mince words: you're a thief. You can walk into just about anybody's house like the door wasn't even locked. You just barge right in and start looking for stuff. Anything you can find that's not nailed down is yours to keep. You will often walk into perfect strangers' houses, lift their precious artifacts, and then chat with them like you were old neighbors as you head back out with their family heirlooms under your arm. Unfortunately, this never works in stores.

    114. Hey, I Know You!
    You will accumulate at least three of these obligatory party members:
    * The spunky princess who is rebelling against her (single) royal parent and is in love with the hero.
    * The demure, soft-spoken female mage and healing magic specialist who is not only in love with the hero, but is also the last survivor of an ancient race.
    * The tough-as-nails female warrior who is not in love with the hero (note that this is the only female character in the game who is not in love with the hero and will therefore be indicated as such by having a spectacular scar, a missing eye, cyborg limbs or some other physical deformity -- see The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly Rule.)
    * The achingly beautiful gothy swordsman who is riven by inner tragedy.
    * The big, tough, angry guy who, deep down, is a total softy.
    * The grim, selfish mercenary who over the course of the game learns what it means to really care about other people.
    * The weird bonus character who requires a bizarre series of side quests to make them effective (with the ultimate result that no player ever uses this character if it can be avoided.)
    * The nauseatingly cute mascot who is useless in all battles.

    115. Hey, I Know You, Too!
    You will also confront/be confronted by at least three of these obligatory foes:
    * The amazingly good-looking and amazingly evil bishounen (Japanese for "long-haired prettyboy") who may or may not be the ultimate villain.
    * The villain's loyal right-hand man, who comes in two versions: humorously incompetent or annoyingly persistent.
    * The villain's attractive female henchman, who is the strongest and most competent soldier in the army but always lets the party escape because she's, yes, fallen in love with the hero.
    * The irritatingly honorable foe whom you never get to kill because, upon discovering the true nature of his superiors, he either nobly sacrifices himself or joins your party.
    * The mad scientist who likes creating mutated creatures and powerful weapons 'cause it's fun (and also handy if uninvited adventurers show up.)
    * The adorably cute li'l creature or six year old child who fights you and, inexplicably, kicks your butt time after time.

    116. "Silly Squall, bringing a sword to a gunfight..."
    No matter what timeframe the game is set in -- past, present, or future -- the main hero and his antagonist will both use a sword for a weapon. (Therefore, you can identify your antagonist pretty easily right from the start of the game just by looking for the other guy who uses a sword.) These swords will be far more powerful than any gun and often capable of distance attacks.

    117. Just Nod Your Head And Smile
    And no matter how big that big-ass sword is, you won't stand out in a crowd. Nobody ever crosses the street to avoid you or seems to be especially shocked or alarmed when a heavily armed gang bursts into their house during dinner, rummages through their posessions, and demands to know if they've seen a black-caped man. People can get used to anything, apparently.

    118. Aeris's Corollary
    Just as the main male character will always use a sword or a variant of a sword, the main female character will always use a rod or a staff of some sort.

    119. MacGyver Rule
    Other than for the protagonists, your choice of weapons is not limited to the prosaic guns, clubs, or swords. Given appropriate skills, you can cut a bloody swath across the continent using gloves, combs, umbrellas, megaphones, dictionaries, sketching tablets -- you name it, you can kill with it. Even better, no matter how surreal your choice of armament, every store you pass will just happen to stock an even better model of it for a very reasonable price. Who else is running around the world killing people with an umbrella?

    120. ¿Quien Es Mas Macho? (Fargo Rule)
    Every powerful character you attempt to seek aid from will first insist upon "testing your strength" in a battle to the death.

    121. Everyday Object Rule
    When an everyday object is useful, it will be fantastically expensive and difficult to find. For instance, if vitamins are used to heal, they'll cost $500.00 each and never ever be in bottles of fifty at the drugstore.

    122. We Had To Destroy The Village In Order To, Well, You Know The Rest (Selene Rule)
    No matter what happens, never call on the government, the church, or any other massive controlling authority for help. They'll just send a brigade of soldiers to burn your entire village to the ground.

    123. Zidane's Curse (or, Dirty Pair Rule)
    An unlucky condition in which every major city in the game will coincidentally wind up being destroyed just after the hero arrives.

    124. Local Control Principle
    Although the boss monster terrorizing the first city in the game is less powerful than the non-boss monsters that are only casual nuisances to cities later in the game, nobody from the first city ever thinks of hiring a few mercenaries from the later cities to kill the monster.

    125. IDKFA
    The basic ammunition for any firearms your characters have is either unlimited or very, very easy to obtain. This will apply even if firearms are extremely rare.

    126. Indestructible Weapon Rule
    No matter how many times you use that sword to strike armored targets or fire that gun on full auto mode it will never break, jam or need any form of maintenance unless it is critical to the story that the weapon breaks, jams or needs maintenance.

    127. Painted-On Equipment Rule
    Enemy equipment doesn't exist. Even if your enemy is a knight in armor wielding a sword, chances are next to nothing that you'll get his armor or sword by the end of the battle. Instead, you'll get some object that (even if it is a gigantic weapon or accessory) was completely invisible during the fight.

    128. Selective Paralysis
    Your characters must always keep both feet on the ground and will be unable to climb over low rock ledges, railings, chairs, cats, slightly differently-colored ground, or any other trivial objects which may happen to be in their way. Note that this condition will not prevent your characters from jumping from railroad car to railroad car later in the game.

    129. You Can't Kill Me, I Quit (Seifer Rule)
    The good guys never seem to get the hang of actually arresting or killing the bad guys. Minor villains are always permitted to go free so they can rest up and menace you again later -- sometimes five minutes later. Knowing this rule, you can deduce that if you do manage to kill (or force the surrender of) a bad guy, you must be getting near the end of the game.

    130. And Now You Die, Mr. Bond! (Beatrix Rule)
    Fortunately for you, the previous rule also applies in reverse. Rather than kill you when they have you at their mercy, the villains will settle for merely blasting you down to 1 hit point and leaving you in a crumpled heap while they stroll off, laughing. (This is, of course, because they're already planning ahead how they'll manipulate you into doing their bidding later in the game -- see Way To Go, Serge.)

    131. Heads I Win, Tails You Lose (Grahf Rule)
    It doesn't matter that you won the fight with the boss monster; the evil task he was trying to carry out will still get accomplished somehow. Really, you might as well not have bothered.

    132. Fake Ending
    There will be a sequence which pretends to be the end of the game but obviously isn't -- if for no other reason than because you're still on Disk 1 of 4.

    133. You Die, And We All Move Up In Rank
    During that fake ending, the true villain of the story will kill the guy you'd thought was the villain, just to demonstrate what a badass he (the true villain) really is. You never get to kill the fake villain yourself.

    134. "What are we going to do tonight, Vinsfeld?"
    The goal of every game (as revealed during the Fake Ending) is to Save the World from an evil figure who's trying to take it over or destroy it. There is no way to escape from this formidable task. No matter whether the protagonist's goal in life is to pay off a debt, to explore distant lands, or just to make time with that cute girl in the blue dress, it will be necessary for him to Save the World in order to accomplish it. Take heart, though -- once the world gets sorted out, everything else will fall into place almost immediately.

    135. Zelda's Axiom
    Whenever somebody tells you about "the five ancient talismans" or "the nine legendary crystals" or whatever, you can be quite confident that Saving the World will require you to go out and find every last one of them.

    136. George W. Bush Geography Simplification Initiative
    Every country in the world will have exactly one town in it, except for the country you start out in, which will have three.

    137. Fodor's Guide Rule
    In the course of your adventure you will visit one desert city, one port town, one mining town, one casino city, one magic city (usually flying), one medieval castle kingdom, one martial arts-based community, one thieves' slum, one lost city and one sci-fi utopia.

    138. Midgar Principle
    The capital of the evil empire is always divided into two sections: a lower city slum filled with slaves and supporters of the rebellion, and an upper city filled with loyal fanatics and corrupt aristocrats.

    139. Short Attention Span Principle
    All bookshelves contain exactly one book, which only has enough text on it to fill up half a page.

    140. Invisible Bureaucracy Rule
    Other than the royal family, its shifty advisor, and the odd mad scientist, the only government employees you will ever encounter in the course of your adventure are either guards or kitchen staff.

    141. The Miracle Of Automation
    Similarily, any factory, power plant, or other facility that you visit during the course of the game will be devoid of any human life except for the occasional guards. There will not be a single line worker or maintenance person in sight.

    142. Principle of Archaeological Convenience
    Every ancient machine you find will work perfectly the first time you try to use it and every time thereafter. Even if its city got blasted into ruins and the machine was then sunk to the bottom of the sea and buried in mud for ten thousand years, it'll still work fine. The unfortunate corollary to this rule is that ancient guardian creatures will also turn out to be working perfectly when you try to filch their stuff.

    143. Kefka's Conclusion
    The loopiest guy in the game will become either your strongest character or your worst enemy.

    144. I Don't Like Gears Or Fighting
    There are always giant robots. Always.

    145. The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly Rule
    a. Any male character who is ugly, malformed, or misshapen is either evil or so moral, spiritual, and/or wise that it's a wonder no one's proposed him for sainthood yet.
    b. Any male character who has a physical disfiguration that doesn't seem to impede him (i.e. a prominent scar across the face or a bad eye) is evil, unless he is the male lead, since scars are cool and no other good guy can be as cool as the hero. An exception is made for characters who are clearly ancient, and therefore automatically not as cool as the young hero.
    c. Any female character who is ugly, malformed, mishapen, or physically disfigured is evil, since all good female characters are there to be potentially seduced by the male lead -- see Know Your Audience.

    146. Henchman Quota (Nana, Saki, and Mio Rule)
    One of your antagonists will have three lovably incompetent stooges whom you fight over and over again. Although they're trusted with their boss's most important plans and equipment, they will screw up repeatedly, argue incessantly among themselves, blab secret information, and generally only come out victorious when their job was to be a diversion or a delaying tactic. A high point of the game will come when the True Villain reveals himself and you're able to convince the stooges you're all on the same side. They won't help you out any more successfully than they helped the antagonist, but at least you won't have to fight them any more.

    147. Thousand Year Rule
    The Ancient Evil returns to savage the land every thousand years on the dot, and the last time it showed up was just about 999.9875 years ago. Despite their best efforts, heroes of the past were never able to do more than seal the Evil away again for the future to deal with (which brings up the question of just how exactly does this "sealing away" work anyway, but never mind.) The good news is that this time, the Evil will get destroyed permanently. The bad news is that you're the one who's going to have to do it.

    148. Ayn Rand's Revenge
    Outside the major cities, there is no government whatsoever. Of course, perhaps that explains why it's so difficult and dangerous to get anywhere outside the major cities.

    149. Law of Productive Gullibility (Ruby Rule)
    Whenever anybody comes up to you with a patently ludicrous claim (such as, "I'm not a cat, I'm really an ancient Red Dragon") there's an at least two-thirds chance they're telling the truth. Therefore, it pays to humor everyone you meet; odds are you'll be glad you did later on.

    150. Perversity Principle
    If you're unsure about what to do next, ask all the townspeople nearby. They will either all strongly urge you to do something, in which case you must immediately go out and do that thing, or else they will all strongly warn you against doing something, in which case you must immediately go out and do that thing.

    151. Mundane Medical Miracle Rule
    In every populated area and several unpopulated ones, you will be able to buy items (usually potions) that instantly heal any wound. Despite their amazing, impossible power, these healing items are conveniently cheap and light, allowing you to purchase and carry at least 99 of them at one time. Note that there will be just as many hospitals and doctors as ever despite the obsolescence of their profession.

    152. First Law of Travel
    Anything can become a vehicle -- castles, cities, military academies, you name it -- so do not be alarmed when the stones of the ancient fortress you are visiting shake underfoot and the whole thing lifts off into the sky. As a corollary, anything is capable of flight if it would be cool, aeronautics or even basic physics be damned.

    153. Second Law of Travel
    There will be only one of any non-trivial type of vehicle in the entire world. Thus, only one ocean-capable steamboat, only one airship, and so forth. Massive facilities will have been constructed all over the world to service this one vehicle.

    154. Third Law of Travel
    The only way to travel by land between different areas of a continent will always be through a single narrow pass in a range of otherwise impenetrable mountains. Usually a palace or monastery will have been constructed in the pass, entirely filling it, so that all intracontinental traffic is apparently required to abandon their vehicles and go on foot up stairs and through the barracks, library and throne room to get to the other side. This may explain why most people just stay home. (In some cases a cave or underground tunnel may be substituted for the palace or monastery, but it will still be just as inconvenient with the added bonuses of cave-ins and nonsensical elevator puzzles.)

    155. Fourth Law of Travel
    Three out of every four vehicles you ride on will eventually sink, derail or crash in some spectacular manner.

    156. Fifth Law of Travel (Big Joe Rule)
    As has been described, you must endure great trials just to get from town to town: locating different vehicles, operating ancient transport mechanisms, evading military blockades, the list goes on. But that's just you. Every other character in the game seems to have no trouble getting to any place in the world on a moment's notice.

    157. If You Meet The Buddha In A Random Encounter, Kill Him!
    When you're out wandering around the world, you must kill everything you meet. People, animals, plants, insects, fire hydrants, small cottages, anything and everything is just plain out to get you. It may be because of your rampant kleptomania (see Garrett's Principle.)

    158. Guy in the Street Rule
    No matter how fast you travel, rumors of world events always travel faster. When you get to anywhere, the people on the street are already talking about where you've been.

    159. Wherever You Go, There They Are
    Wherever the characters go, the villains can always find them. Chances are they're asking the guy in the street (see above). But don't worry -- despite being able to find the characters with ease anytime they want to, the bad guys never get rid of them by simply blowing up the tent or hotel they're spending the night in. (Just think of it: the screen dims, the peaceful going-to-sleep-now music plays, then BOOM! Game Over!)

    160. You Do Not Talk About Fight Club
    Any fighting tournament or contest of skill you hear about, you will eventually be forced to enter and win.

    161. Figurehead Rule
    Whenever someone asks you a question to decide what to do, it's just to be polite. He or she will ask the question again and again until you answer "correctly."

    162. Puddin' Tame Rule
    The average passer-by will always say the same thing no matter how many times you talk to them, and they certainly won't clarify any of the vaguely worded warnings or cryptic half-sentences they threw at you the previous time.

    163. But They Don't Take American Express
    Every merchant in the world -- even those living in far-off villages or hidden floating cities cut off from the outside world for centuries, even those who speak different languages or are of an entirely different species -- accepts the same currency.

    164. Nostradamus Rule
    All legends are 100% accurate. All rumors are entirely factual. All prophecies will come true, and not just someday but almost immediately.

    165. You Always Travel In The Right Circles
    Whenever you meet a villager or other such incidental character who promises to give you some great piece of needed knowledge or a required object in exchange for a seemingly simple item, such as a bar of soap or a nice straw mat, be prepared to spend at least an hour chasing around the world exchanging useless innocuous item after item with bizarre strangers until you can get that elusive first item you were asked for.

    166. Talk Is Cheap Rule
    Nothing is ever solved by diplomacy or politics in the world of RPGs. Any declarations of peace, summits and treaty negotiations are traps to fool the ever so gullible Good Guys into thinking the war is over, or to brainwash the remaining leaders of the world.

    167. Stop Your Life (Setzer Rule)
    No matter what kind of exciting, dynamic life a character was leading before joining your party, once there they will be perfectly content to sit and wait on the airship until you choose to use them.

    168. "You Couldn't Get To Sleep Either, Huh?"
    If any character in the game ever meets any other character standing alone at night looking at the moon, those two will eventually fall in love.

    169. Selective Invulnerability Principle
    RPG characters are immune from such mundane hazards as intense heat, freezing cold, or poison gas... except when they're suddenly not. Surprise!

    170. Law of Numbers
    There will be several items or effects which depend on the numerical value of your hit points, level, etc., which makes no sense unless the characters can see all the numbers in their world and find it perfectly normal that a spell only works on a monster whose level is a multiple of 5.

    171. I'm the NRA (Billy Lee Black Rule)
    Opposition to gun control is probably the only thing you could get all RPG characters to agree upon. Even deep religious faith and heartfelt pacifism can't compete with the allure of guns.

    172. First Law of Fashion
    All characters wear a single costume which does not change over the course of the game. The only exception is when characters dress up in enemy uniforms to infiltrate their base.

    173. Second Law of Fashion
    Any female character's costume, no matter how outlandish, is always completely suitable to wear when climbing around in caves, hiking across the desert, and slogging through the sewers.

    174. Last Rule of Politics
    Kingdoms are good. Empires are evil.

    175. Franklin Covey Was Wrong, Wrong, Wrong
    Sticking to the task at hand and going directly from place to place and goal to goal is always a bad idea, and may even prevent you from being able to finish the game. It's by dawdling around, completing side quests and giving money to derelicts that you come into your real power.

    176. Wait! That Was A Load-Bearing Boss!
    Defeating a dungeon's boss creature will frequently cause the dungeon to collapse, which is nonsensical but does make for thrilling escape scenes.

    177. Magical Inequality Theorem
    In the course of your travels you may find useful-sounding spells such as Petrify, Silence, and Instant Death. However, you will end up never using these spells in combat because a) all ordinary enemies can be killed with a few normal attacks, making fancy attacks unneccessary, b) all bosses and other stronger-than-average monsters are immune to those effects so there's no point in using them for long fights where they'd actually come in handy, and c) the spells usually don't work anyway.

    178. Magical Inequality Corollary
    When the enemy uses Petrify, Silence, Instant Death, et cetera spells on you, they will be effective 100% of the time.

    179. The Ominous Ring of Land
    The classic Ominous Ring of Land is a popular terrain feature that frequently doesn't show up on your world map. Just when you think things are going really well and you've got the Forces of Evil on the run, monsters, demons and mad gods will pour out of the center of the ring and the situation will get ten times worse. The main villain also usually hangs out in one of these after attaining godhood. If there are several Ominous Rings of Land or the entire world map is one big ring, you are just screwed.

    180. Law of NPC Relativity (Magus Rule)
    Characters can accomplish superhuman physical feats, defeat enemies with one hand tied behind their back and use incredible abilities -- until they join your party and you can control them. Then these wonderful powers all vanish, along with most of their hit points.

    181. Guards! Guards! (or, Lindblum Full Employment Act)
    Everything will be guarded and gated (elevators, docks, old rickety bridges, random stretches of roadway deep in the forest) except for the stuff that actually needs to be.

    182. Thank You For Pressing The Self-Destruct Button
    All enemy installations and city-sized military vehicles will be equipped with a conveniently located, easy-to-operate self-destruct mechanism.

    183. Harmless Looking Monster Law (Tonberry Rule)
    If you encounter a monster that looks odd, harmless, and cute, run away! It is insanely strong and will easily decimate your party.

    184. Falling Rule
    An RPG character can fall any distance onto anything without suffering anything worse than brief unconsciousness. In fact, falling a huge distance is an excellent cure for otherwise fatal wounds -- anyone who you see shot, stabbed, or mangled and then tossed off a cliff is guaranteed to return later in the game with barely a scratch.

    185. Materials Science 101
    Gold, silver, and other precious metals make excellent weapons and armor even though in the real world they are too soft and heavy to use for that purpose. In fact, they work so well that nobody ever melts their solid gold suit of armor down into bullion, sells it, and retires to a tropical isle on the proceeds.

    186. Materials Science 201
    Everyone you meet will talk enthusiastically about how some fantastically rare metal (iron, say) would make the best possible armor and weapons. Oh, if only you could get your hands on some! However, once you actually obtain iron -- at great personal risk, of course -- everyone will dismiss it as yesterday's news and instead start talking about some even more fantastically rare metal, such as gold. Repeat until you get to the metal after "mythril" (see The Ultimate Rule.)

    187. Gender Equality, Part 1
    Your average female RPG character carries a variety of deadly weapons and can effortlessly hack or magic her way through armies of monsters, killer cyborgs, and mutated boss creatures without breaking a sweat. She may be an accomplished ninja, a superpowered secret agent, or the world's greatest adventurer. However, if one of the game's villains manages to sneak up and grab her by the Standard Female Character Grab Area (her upper arm) she will be rendered utterly helpless until rescued by the hero.

    188. Gender Equality, Part 2 (Feena Rule)
    If any female character, in a burst of anger or enthusiasm, decides to go off and accomplish something on her own without the hero, she will fail miserably and again have to be rescued.

    189. Gender Equality, Part 3 (Luna Rule)
    All of the effort you put into maxing out the female lead's statistics and special abilities will turn out to be for naught when she spends the final confrontation with the villain dead, ensorcelled, or held hostage.

    190. Stealing The Spotlight (Edea Rule)
    The characters who join your party only briefly tend to be much cooler than your regular party members.

    191. "Mommy, why didn't they just use a Phoenix Down on Aeris?"
    Don't expect battle mechanics to carry over into the "real world."

    192. Sephiroth Memorial Escape Clause
    Any misdeed up to and including multiple genocide is forgiveable if you're cool enough.

    193. Party Guidance Rule
    Somewhere in the last third of the story, the hero will make a stupid decision and the rest of the party must remind him of all that they have learned from being with him in order to return the hero to normal.

    194. Bad Is Good, Baby!
    The heroes can always count on the support of good-hearted vampires, dragons, thieves, demons, and chainsaw murderers in their quest to save the world from evil. And on the other hand...

    195. Good Is Bad, Baby!
    Watch out for generous priests, loyal military officers, and basically anyone in a position of authority who agrees to help you out, especially if they save your life and prove their sincerity innumerable times -- they're usually plotting your demise in secret (at least when they can fit it into their busy schedule of betraying their country, sponsoring international terrorism, and stealing candy from small children) and will stab you in the back at the most inconvenient moment, unless they fall under...

    196. General Leo's Exception
    Honorable and sympathetic people who work for the Other Side are always the genuine article. Of course they'll be busily stabbing you in the front, so either way you lose. Eventually though, they'll fall prey to...

    197. The Ineffectual Ex-Villain Theorem (Col. Mullen Rule)
    No matter how tough and bad-ass one of the Other Side's henchmen is, if he bails to the side of Good he'll turn out to be not quite tough and bad-ass enough. The main villain will defeat him easily. But don't weep -- usually he'll manage to escape just in time, leaving you to deal with the fate that was meant for him.

    198. All The Time In The World (Rinoa Rule)
    Unless there's a running countdown clock right there on the screen, you have as long as you want to complete any task -- such as, say, rescuing a friend who's hanging by one hand from a slippery cliff edge thousands of feet in the air -- no matter how incredibly urgent it is. Dawdle or hurry as you will, you'll always make it just in the nick of time.

    199. Ladies First (Belleza Rule)
    When things really start falling apart, the villain's attractive female henchman will be the first to jump ship and switch to the side of Good. Sadly, she still won't survive until the end credits, because later she will sacrifice her life out of unrequited love for the villain.

    200. Trial By Fire (Cecil Rule)
    Any dark and brooding main characters will ultimately be redeemed by a long, ardous, quasi-spiritual quest that seems difficult at the time, but in the great scheme of things just wasn't that big of a deal after all.

    201. Way To Go, Serge
    It will eventually turn out that, for a minimum of the first sixty percent of the game, you were actually being manipulated by the forces of evil into doing their sinister bidding for them. In extreme cases this may go as high as 90%.

    202. They Never Learn
    Nevertheless, no matter how in-your-face clear it becomes that the villain is playing the hero, and no matter how many times the hero gets burned, he will never realize that he's being suckered and decide to change his plans (or just abandon the quest and go get drunk, presumably foiling the villain's manipulative schemes that way.)

    203. Gilligan's Prescription
    Any character who has amnesia will be cured before the end of the game. They usually won't like what they find out about themselves, though.

    204. Luke, I Am Your Tedious, Overused Plot Device (Lynx Rule)
    If there is any chance whatsoever that major villain X could be the male lead's father, then it will turn out that major villain X is the male lead's father.

    205. Golden Chocobo Principle
    There will be at least one supremely ultimate improvement for your weapon or some way to make your trusted steed capable of going anywhere and doing anything, requiring hours and hours of hard work to acquire. Once you do achieve this, you will use it once, and it will be completely useless for the rest of the game.

    206. Golden Chocobo Corollary
    The magic formula for acquiring this supreme upgrade will be only vaguely alluded to in the game itself. Ideally, you're supposed to shell out $19.95 for the strategy guide instead.

    207. "Evil will always triumph, because Good is dumb!"
    If the villain needs all ten legendary medallions to attain world domination and you have nine of them, everybody in your party still thinks it is neccessary to bring the nine to the villain's castle and get the final one, instead of hiding the ones they've already got and spoiling his plans that way. After you foolishly bring the legendary medallions to the villain's hideout, he will kidnap one of your companions (usually the main love interest) and you will trade the world away to rescue your friend.

    208. It's Not My Department, Says Wernher Von Braun
    All space stations, flying cities, floating continents and so forth will without exception either be blown up or crash violently to earth before the end of the game.

    209. Pyrrhic Victory
    By the time you've gotten it in gear, dealt with your miscellaneous personal crises and are finally ready to go Save the World once and for all, nine-tenths of it will already have been destroyed. Still, you've got to give your all to save the remaining one-tenth.

    210. Compression of Time
    As you approach the final confrontation with the villain, events will become increasingly awkward, contrived and disconnected from one another -- almost as if some cosmic Author was running up against a deadline and had to slap together the ending at the last minute.

    211. Adam Smith's Revenge
    By the end of the game you are renowned everywhere as the Legendary Heroes, every surviving government and authority figure has rallied behind you, the fate of the world is obviously hanging in the balance, and out of nowhere random passers-by give you a pat on the back and heartfelt good luck wishes. However, shopkeepers won't even give you a discount, much less free supplies for the final battle with evil.

    212. Adam Smith's Corollary
    No matter how thoroughly devastated the continent/planet/universe is, there's always some shopkeeper who survived the end of the world and sits outside the gates of the villain's castle, selling the most powerful equipment in the game, like nothing ever happened.

    213. "So, Andross, you reveal your true form!"
    You will have to kill the evil villain at least twice at the end of the game. First the villain will look like a person or some creature and be rather easy to kill. Then he will grow to about 50 times the hero's size and be much harder to kill.

    214. In Your Face, Jesus!
    Even if you manage to deal with him that time, you're not done -- the villain will then transform into his final form, which is always an angelic winged figure with background music remixed for ecstatic chorus and pipe organ.

    215. If I Cannot Rule The World, There Will Be No World To Rule
    During the last battle, the villain may destroy the world or even the entire solar system just to get you. Do not be alarmed: since the world is generally none the worse for wear afterwards, these attacks seem to be largely illusionary. They still hurt like the dickens, though.

    216. The Moral Of The Story (Ghaleon Rule)
    Every problem in the universe can be solved by finding the right long-haired prettyboy and beating the crap out of him.

    217. Weapon Rule
    There's always a hidden creature who is much harder to defeat than even the ultimate bad guy's final, world-annihilating form. It's lucky for all concerned that this hidden creature prefers to stay hidden rather than trying to take over the world himself, because he'd probably win. As a corollary, whatever reward you get for killing the hidden creature is basically worthless because by the time you're powerful enough to defeat him, you don't need it any more.

    218. The Ultimate Rule
    Anything called "Ultima (whatever)" or "Ultimate (whatever)" isn't. There's always at least one thing somewhere in the world which is even more.

    219. Know Your Audience (Vyse Rule)
    Every woman in the game will find the male lead incredibly attractive.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 51,410 CMod ✭✭✭✭Retr0gamer


    I feel like such a nerd, I got almost all the obscure references to games like skies of arcadia, grandia etc.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,700 ✭✭✭Loobz


    Is all else fails, use a crowbar.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,848 ✭✭✭Fnz


    221. The gods seem to smile on AI racers who fall to the back of the field - giving them a much needed boost in speed. You'll find that you're no more than one badly-taken corner away from being overtaken by the rest of the field... even if you were on course for a new fastest race record.
    Loobz wrote:
    Is all else fails, use a crowbar.
    .... wel, it is suitable for any "free man".


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