TRIFORCE89
Guide of Darkness
- 8,121
- Posts
- 21
- Years
- Age 35
- Temple of Light
- Seen Feb 2, 2025
Ever played a game that made you laugh out loud? Have a good chuckle? Grin from ear to ear?
Writing in video games have really improved in the last couple of years. We've moved beyond the comic mischief, sight gags, and slapstick comedy of yesteryear (I'm looking at you Banjo-Kazooie series), and actually have well-written jokes.
And not only well-written, but well-delivered.
In the past, maybe, year-and-a-half, three games come to mind that tickled my funny bone (not all released in that time span, but happen to play them all then).
Ghostbusters: The Video Game
First off, this along with Batman: Arkham Asylum and Wii's GoldenEye 007 show that licensed games can work and work really well when the original source material is respected and part of the original development/production team is brought in to work on the game. And, that's the reason for the game's success in the humour category.
Written by Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis (who wrote the films and portrayed Ray Stanz and Egon Spengler respectively), the film is effectively "Ghostbusters III". The script is authentic to the characters and very funny (but subtle. Like the films, it isn't "laugh out loud". Just...humorous). There's an almost non-stop stream of original dialogue and witty banter being exchanged between the Ghostbusters, who comment on almost everything, as you play. All voiced by the original cast too. It makes for a better sequel to the original film than Ghostbusters II did. XD
Tales of Monkey Island
Unlike Ghostbusters, this is a lot more "Hey, these are the jokes people. Come on, laugh". There's a lot of humour here and lot of reliance on puns. But, from, among other things, the neither-man-or-woman-merfolk, to trying to court a giant manatee, to the sadistic Marquis de Singe, the game's quality zaniness still had me laughing.
Portal 2
I'm not yet finished this. On the second-last chapter, but still really enjoying and finding it funnier than the first one. GLaDOS is as wonderfully insulting and sarcastic as ever, but with a little bit of a new edge to her. I lol'ed GLaDOS fangirling over Cave Johnson and "Burn it down! ... Burning people! He says what we're all thinking!"
lol
Writing in video games have really improved in the last couple of years. We've moved beyond the comic mischief, sight gags, and slapstick comedy of yesteryear (I'm looking at you Banjo-Kazooie series), and actually have well-written jokes.
And not only well-written, but well-delivered.
In the past, maybe, year-and-a-half, three games come to mind that tickled my funny bone (not all released in that time span, but happen to play them all then).
Ghostbusters: The Video Game
First off, this along with Batman: Arkham Asylum and Wii's GoldenEye 007 show that licensed games can work and work really well when the original source material is respected and part of the original development/production team is brought in to work on the game. And, that's the reason for the game's success in the humour category.
Written by Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis (who wrote the films and portrayed Ray Stanz and Egon Spengler respectively), the film is effectively "Ghostbusters III". The script is authentic to the characters and very funny (but subtle. Like the films, it isn't "laugh out loud". Just...humorous). There's an almost non-stop stream of original dialogue and witty banter being exchanged between the Ghostbusters, who comment on almost everything, as you play. All voiced by the original cast too. It makes for a better sequel to the original film than Ghostbusters II did. XD
Tales of Monkey Island
Unlike Ghostbusters, this is a lot more "Hey, these are the jokes people. Come on, laugh". There's a lot of humour here and lot of reliance on puns. But, from, among other things, the neither-man-or-woman-merfolk, to trying to court a giant manatee, to the sadistic Marquis de Singe, the game's quality zaniness still had me laughing.
Portal 2
I'm not yet finished this. On the second-last chapter, but still really enjoying and finding it funnier than the first one. GLaDOS is as wonderfully insulting and sarcastic as ever, but with a little bit of a new edge to her. I lol'ed GLaDOS fangirling over Cave Johnson and "Burn it down! ... Burning people! He says what we're all thinking!"
lol