Translate

Saturday, February 13, 2021

Videogame Review, Shaq-Fu for the Sega Genesis

Videogame Review, Shaq-Fu for the Sega Genesis


Comedy is a dangerous element to use for fighting games.  We observe silly people, fool around, and get very little done on purpose because it’s a joke.  Beauty is possible; however, purpose is still the accident in this case.  Just the name “Shaq-Fu” is asking for it.  There’s exaggeration, fantasy, and motion to performance of weak words.  By viewing the horrible fighting system and looking on in frustration of goofy feet and awful wraps, “racism” is an appropriate term for this humiliating defeat of entertainment upon wild style.  I don’t like it.  There’s got to be something to get that thing off.  Fighting games do involve variety of purpose where accident is the chance of regret within serious issues.  Here, the comedy is very much the problem since fighters in real life are supposed to be powerful forces while jokes and humors merely display happy frustration of effectiveness.  Call this game a form of dis-authorization under insanity.  There’s pretty video and sparkling glitter to less sensation of favors according to display and effective measures of ridicule although I’m still expecting returns of heat and aggression.  Instead, whatever punch is a likely miss and even kicks get the turn around for swift avoidance of magic.  (For clarification, and to avoid confusion, to make fun of foreigners and to present them as fake idols without the right tools in learning and education, is racism.)  Perhaps there’s enough low flavor you happen to see until wonder strikes conversation with others about Shaq-Fu; then again, we’re beginning to understand how imagination begins to crumble under fascination for stories where the boot fits particular to unique communities and lazy effort.  I get the point of Shaq-Fu to a degree.  But, if the fighting was more serious to laugh about and poke fun at, we’re diving into offense from disposition near the fountain of youth and the might of magic if we’re to exaggerate and pretend to be honest.  Don’t tell me there’s no prejudice in people among us.  It’s not possible to get into fights without some kind of frustration level for loss in combat due to unfair privilege and cultural effects of mannerism.  Think about it!  I can’t just punch a ninja right in the face and say, “Oh, I have no prejudice.  We’re all human.”  Keep in mind that this game was rated “Mature”.  How interesting!  A racist game… for a mature audience?  They don’t know the beginning of it!  The magic spells here are far from being effective for good measure and fighters often jump around to complicated matters of soft, euphemistic disruption of logic.  Of course, so many gamers believe in the insanity and hope for the best if faith depends on attitude for immediate comfort.  Even on the objectives to do something immediately, I thought the game was broken and the gameplay turned into a madhouse of fits and despicable egos.  The joke isn’t funny and we’re better left without it.




https://www.deviantart.com/gameuniverso/art/Review-of-Shaq-Fu-Sega-Genesis-870200434

No comments:

Post a Comment