An excerpt from episode 112 – Keanu Reeves: Free Pizza. The panel does whatever impressions they feel like whilst reading lines from Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, The Matrix, and John Wick.
Panel: Hobbit, Lowdown Brown, Grutz, Kyle Smash, Edweird, & The Bruce
Our illustrious host sat down with Instant Replay Live for a few let’s play levels of Marble Madness!
“Back to strike with insanity, Mike “The Hobbit” Bickett has returned to Instant Replay Live with Marble Madness to play with Nick and Joe. Whose balls will emerge on top?”
Instant Replay Live is a gameplay channel featuring a slew of PC games from all genres, RPG, Action, Adventure, FPS, Platformer, RTS, Puzzle, Stealth, Survival, Strategy, or Sim hosted by Nick and Joe, two brothers who might just kill each other if they keep on doing this!
Subscribe for a video every other day from the IRL guys or the gIRLs released by noon!
Marble Madness is an arcade video game designed by Mark Cerny and published by Atari Games in 1984. The player uses a trackball to guide an onscreen marble through six obstacle-filled courses within a time limit. Marble Madness was Atari’s first game to use the Atari System 1 hardware and to be programmed in the C programming language. It was also one of the first games to use true stereo sound; previous games used either monaural sound or simulated stereo.
Cerny drew inspiration from miniature golf, racing games, and artwork by M. C. Escher. He applied a minimalist approach in designing the appearance of the game’s courses and enemies.
Marble Madness was commercially successful. The game was ported to numerous platforms and inspired the development of other games. A sequel was developed and planned for release in 1991, but canceled when location testing showed the game could not compete with other titles.
Developer(s) Atari Games
Publisher(s) Atari Games
Designer(s) Mark Cerny
Composer(s) Brad Fuller
Hal Canon
David Wise (NES Version)
Matt Furniss (GG/SMS version)
Steve Hayes (GEN version)
Kenji Yokoyama (SMD version)
Platform(s) Arcade (original)
Amiga, Apple II, Apple IIGS, Atari ST, C64, Game Boy, Game Gear, Master System, Nintendo Entertainment System, PC booter, Genesis, Sharp X68000, ZX Spectrum
Release
NA: December 15, 1984
Genre(s) Platform, racing
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously
Cabinet Custom upright
Arcade system Atari System 1
CPU Motorola 68010
Sound Yamaha YM2151, POKEY
Display 19″ Horizontal orientation, Raster,
standard resolution (used: 336 × 240)”
Geeks Under the Influence host The Hobbit recently guested on Instant Replay Live for a Let’s Play of Ghosts ‘N Goblins forthe Nintendo Entertainment System! Their show info is below!
“A game with an obscenely difficult learning curve that consumed our collective attentions as children is BACK – Ghost ‘N Goblins on the 8-Bit NES doesn’t just stomp all hope from Joe and I, but also our drinkin’ and geekin’ guest Mike “the Hobbit” Bickett from Geeks Under the Influence Podcast!
Instant Replay Live is a gameplay channel featuring a slew of PC games from all genres, RPG, Action, Adventure, FPS, Platformer, RTS, Puzzle, Stealth, Survival, Strategy, or Sim hosted by Nick and Joe, two brothers who might just kill each other if they keep on doing this!
Subscribe for a video every other day from the IRL guys or the gIRLs released by noon!”
Ghosts ‘n Goblins, known as Makaimura (Japanese: 魔界村?, “Demon World Village”) in Japan, is a run and gun platformer video game series created by Tokuro Fujiwara and developed by Capcom. The first entry in the series was Ghosts ‘n Goblins, released as an arcade title on September 19, 1985. The series has subsequently been released on and ported to a variety of game consoles and mobile platforms and spawned several sequels and spin-offs.
The main series contains seven games: Ghosts ‘n Goblins, Ghouls ‘n Ghosts, Super Ghouls ‘n Ghosts, Makaimura for WonderSwan, Ultimate Ghosts ‘n Goblins, Ghosts ‘n Goblins: Gold Knights, and Ghosts ‘n Goblins: Gold Knights II, and focuses on the knight Arthur’s quest to save princess Prin-Prin from the demon king Astaroth. The primary spin-offs include the Gargoyle’s Quest and Maximo game series.
The series as a whole has sold over 4.4 million units and stands as the 8th best selling Capcom game franchise. It has gained a reputation among gamers for its high level of difficulty
Genres Run and gun, platformer
Developers Capcom
Publishers Capcom
Creators Tokuro Fujiwara
First release Ghosts ‘n Goblins
JP: September 19, 1985
Latest release Ghosts ‘n Goblins: Gold Knights II
NA: August 12, 2010
Spin-offs Gargoyle’s Quest, Maximo”
*NSFW*
Panel!
Meet the panel!
Filled with modern podcast geekery…
From the-
Town of Richmond.
Watch them riff and have a drink or three….
On this episode, we discuss the weird and wonderful world of Hanna Barbera!
Panelists: Hobbit, Lowdown Brown, The Bruce, and Cron
What We’re Drinkin’: Three Notch’d Brewery: Brother Barnabas, and Rogue Dead Guy Ale.
Video for this Episode:
Audio for this Episode:
● Track Info ●
Commercial Plug Music:
SKGB – Ridin Dirty Wit Ganesha
Disclaimer Music:
David Mumford – Night Without Sleep (Instrumental)
Kevin MacLeod – Fretless sellfy.com/p/hi2x/
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Join Us Every 1st and 3rd Monday at Fallout, and every 2nd and 4th Tuesday at Wonderland for GUI Trivia! 8-10 pm
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Intro Music is “Little Girl” courtesy of the “Gojira Experiment”
bit.ly/2fmfQkh
Outro Music is “Dead By Dawn” courtesy of the “Creep-A-Zoids”
www.creep-a-zoids.com/
Geeks Under the Influence is a trademark of Michael Bickett. All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
Excerpt from Ep. 107 of the “Geeks Under the Influence” podcast.
“Making a Drunken Scene” is when we do short table readings from related films/TV shows while doing hilarious accents or impressions.
The video store: For many younger people, it’s a laughable relic from an analog age. A VHS-era dinosaur from a time when mankind was forced to leave their couches and venture into the night; uncertain if they’d be able to snag the last copy of Tango and Cash. Before the streaming era began, we had a few choices when it came to video stores. Everyone old enough remembers Movie Gallery, Blockbuster, and Hollywood Video. A trip to the video store growing up was an adventure! Weaving through the new movies and old classics with the determination of Ahab in search of our own white whale. We didn’t have YouTube at our fingertips to check out trailers before renting. We had to go by the cover art and description. That method is better, as it allowed me to see some incredible films I wouldn’t have bothered with after watching the trailer.
An actual picture of me from 2006
I was already a video store junkie when I moved to Richmond in the early 2000’s. So much so, that I ended up working as a manager for a couple years at one of the previously mentioned chain stores. Even so, I became a regular renter at the Video Fan. Though smaller than my well-lit corporate video prison, the Video Fan’s expertly curated sections were a time machine to my fondest video store memories of old. Glancing at the new releases, I’d choose a movie or two then race upstairs to the cult and horror sections; Gushing over impossible to find VHS copies of forgotten gems that were all mine, if only for a night or two.
They have a copy of “Thriller (They Call Her One Eye).” I MEAN, C’MON!!!
The Video Fan felt more like a record store than a video rental place, which was a good thing. The employees had a Guru-like knowledge of film. In those hallowed halls, I was directed to cinematic masterpieces that would have otherwise been overlooked. For that, I will forever be grateful. Pangs of pity go out to those in the future. They may never be able to experience a truly independent video store like Video Fan. Something special happens when talking with fellow cinephiles and video store employees that can’t be imitated with online movie forums and blogs. There’s comfort to a store knowing it’s neighbors well enough to pick up ten copies of the newest Jim Jarmusch film, and only three of the newest Transformers movie.
The RZA, The GZA, and Bill Murray lamenting the closing of Video Fan
In late 2014, Video Fan started a Kickstarter campaign with a very simple purpose; keep the store open for another year while it secures non-profit status. In addition, a documentary about the legendary store called “Video Fan Forever” was to be made. The funds were raised with great success, and the store stayed open. They even started a non-profit to keep the store alive! videofanforever.com
Enter 2017. Over 2 years after the Kickstarter campaign, Richmond’s best video store is closing it’s doors. They “can no longer sustain the business in it’s current location.” The “Video Fan Forever” documentary will still be made, but unfortunately, with a much sadder ending. Times have changed. The convenience of Redbox, streaming Media, and OnDemand won out in the end. They are more convenient, sure, but by no means better. Not by a long shot. For 31 years the Video Fan has served as Richmond’s movie geek heaven, and it will be deeply missed.
In a Facebook announcement, Video Fan showered thanks on it’s dedicated customers.
“Thank you for the love you’ve shown over 31 incredible years.”
No, Thank you, Video Fan. Thank you.
For a deeper look into the decline of physical media, check out the documentary “VHS Massacre.” Available to stream free for prime members on Amazon (Yes, we see the irony).