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Friday, March 27, 2020

Videogame Review, Kung Fu for the Nintendo Entertainment System (w/ Brand New NES Console and Slight Modifications)



Videogame Review, Kung Fu for the Nintendo Entertainment System (w/ Brand New NES Console and Slight Modifications)

It’s corny, silly, and dramatic for an early fighting game from the 80’s.  The controls are just about as comfortable as they can get for an easy NES game on fumes.  You know the B-movie flick in the art of ninja- a hero, punching, jumping, and kicking his way into battles with heated madmen who kidnap a lady in distress.  NES games are recognized for the 8-bit animation where credit may be due or simply denied on Nintendo’s basis for glory.  Some of the best video games to play are ones which display cliches- it’s easy to be aware of Kung Fu, it’s challenging and fun, and overall gameplay is dead-on for the Asian movie flick.  Or maybe this exaggeration plays up for a theory on my end upon connecting factors of entertainment where relation fits expression.  At the most with estimation, the grace realized from playing Kung Fu gets a flow of energy surging into the Nintendo equipment on a hot scale of fashion specified on nearing greatness of abstraction.  Having this game means a lot to me.  I’ve talked to plenty of Asians and Asian Americans.  Individualism forms a picture over the fighting spree because action meets quality in dispute as long as the NES controller is designed for a snug fit.  Some guys eat too much.  You’ll see guys in the game who appear a little “round” for the ninja types.  Eyebrows can shake on a villain’s face during use of a swiping weapon.  At times my use of “ninja” is metaphorical to refer to conflict, victory, and turmoil in terms of comedy.  Humor can’t be understated with this NES classic- the bottom line is where it fits.  Pushing the red action buttons becomes an invigorating process of self-defeating measures.  Difficulty varies; however, a general touch is engineered under the gaze of combat.  So many of the bad guys are very funny!  Of course, Kung Fu, like Duck Hunt, rings in with extraordinary circumstances that are aided for by voice samples.  These 2 NES games don’t match the quality performance of Missile Command on the Atari 5200 console to an extent, yet, the spacial horizons reveal the open wounds of combat that few Atari 5200 games can match.  Nintendo would later release the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, a sequel console to the Nintendo Entertainment System, and, the Nintendo Gameboy was also nicknamed “Nintendo Entertainment System”.  On a technical level, for scientific reasoning, most Nintendo consoles have been Nintendo Entertainment Systems.  I can sense great benefits to playing Kung Fu on the Nintendo Switch. 

https://www.deviantart.com/gameuniverso/art/Review-of-Kung-Fu-Nintendo-Entertainment-System-835348064


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