Sundry Sunday: The Failed Pilot for the Bubsy Cartoon

Sundry Sunday is our weekly feature of fun gaming culture finds and videos, from across the years and even decades.

Bubsy has been undergoing a bit of a revival lately, with a well-received collection out from Limited Run/Atari and an upcoming 3D platformer that’s the talk of the flat-toned polygonal town.

Soon after release hopes were high for Bubsy. Games like Sonic the Hedgehog and… well… Sonic the Hedgehog 2 had the world convinced that edgy animal mascot platformers were golden, and characters like Aero the Acrobat and Awesome Possum invested our consoles like wisecracking vermin. Bubsy was just one of them.

Bubsy got a pilot for an animated show. It follows. (27 minutes)

Another failed pilot from the time was one for Battletoads (22 minutes). Earthworm Jim’s pilot was actually successful, and its cartoon lasted for two seasons, and it wasn’t all that bad. Bubsy’s cartoon… well, see for yourself.

Mechanical Hand-Held Games

Robin from 8-Bit Show-And-Tell has mentioned Loadstar, the magazine that I am trying to help preserve with the itch.io version of Loadstar Compleat. I say that just to mention anything that might even be slightly considered to be conflict of interest. There, done. All of this said, this post has nothing to do with any of that!

Before Tiger’s line of cheap handheld mechanical electonic games in the 80s and 90s, there were cheap handheld mechanical wide-up games in the 70s and 80s! These are basically forgotten by most people today, but kids of that age might vaguely remember them, made by companies like Tomy.

There used to be more websites dedicated to uncovering and preserving them. One that remains to this day is the Handheld Museum, which has an extensive listing of Tomy’s titles.

Another place you might be able to learn about them, with demonstrations, is Robin’s video on them. (29 minutes)

Robin shows off a variety of them, including a variety of electric (as opposed to electronic) games. Some weren’t even battery powered, instead having to be wound up via a dial on the back, but all but the last of the games in this video run on batteries. One had to be repaired on camera. The first game is the earliest, a solitaire version of poker, dating to 1971; for context, Pong, the first commercially successful video game, was made in 1972.

It just goes to show that personal gaming was something that existed even before video games. It was something in the air at the time, and even if Pong hadn’t happened (or the earlier Computer Space, or the Odyssey, or even prior games made at universities and laboratories), it seems evident that it would have happened shortly anyway. It was an idea that was bound to happen eventually, and probably sooner rather than later.

Black Friday on the Switch eShop

This is everything that’s at least half-off in the eShop’s Black Friday promotion this year.

Black Friday has slowly been creeping out over the entirety of Thanksgiving Week, and in its stupidly-named “Cyber Monday” incarnation the week after too. Nintendo’s eShop has begun its Black Friday sale early. Here’s a recap of the items being sold that are at least 50% off. As always, no one is paying for this placement; it’s being offered as a service to our readers. Most of these discounts are set to last about four more days.

Many faces, many sizes

Persona 5 Royal
$21 (65% off)
https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/persona-5-royal-switch/

Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle
$10 (75% off)
Gold Edition
$12 (80% off)
Season Pass
$4 (80% off)

Overcooled! All You Can Eat
$13.59 (66% off)

Cult of the Lamb: Cultist Edition
$15 (half off)

Half of all games these days are about a fantasy (in one way or other) fightyman doing fightythings

Dark Souls Remastered
$20 (half off)

Moving Out 2 Deluxe Edition
$11.20 (66% off)

Borderlands…
3 Ultimate Edition
$24 (60$ off)
Pandora’s Box
$37.49 (75% off)

Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled
$14 (65% off)

Sonic x Shadow Generations Digital Edition…
Switch
$30 (half off)
Switch 2
$30 (half off)

Sonic Colors Ultimate
$12 (70% off)

It Takes Two
$20 (half off)

MySims Cozy Bundle
$20 (half off)

MLB The Show 25/
$10 (85% off)

SpongeBob Squarepants…
The Cosmic Shake
$20 (half off)
Battle for Bikini Bottom Rehydrated
$15 (half off)

Wolfenstein II The New Colossus
$6 (85% off)

Shin Megami Tensei V: Vengeance Digital Edition Switch
$28 (60% off)

Dead by Daylight: Tokyo Ghoul Edition
$20 (half off)

Little Nightmares I & II Bundle
$15 (70% off)

Star Wars Grand Collection
Contains: Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast, Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy, Bounty Hunter, Knights of the Old Republic I & II, Episode I: Jedi Power Battles, Episode I Racer, Force Unleashed, Republic Commando
$56 (60% off)

Blasphemous 2
$9.89 (67%)

Why not just stay out of the Gungeon to begin with?

Enter x Exit the Gungeon
$4 (80% off)

Plants vs Zombies: Battle for Neighborville Complete Edition Switch
$7.59 (81% off)

No More Heroes III
$25 (half off)

Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes
$15 (half off)

Diablo III Eternal Edition
$19.79 (67% off)

X-COM 2 Collection
$7.49 (85% off)

Axiom Verge 1 & II Bundle
$14 (65% off)

Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown Complete Edition
$20 (half off)

For the approximately 12 people who haven’t played Skyrim yet

The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
$16.49 (67% off)

Madden NFL 26
$35 (half off)

FC 26
Switch edition
$30 (half off)
Switch 2 edition
$35 (half off)

Deadly Premonition 2: A Blessing in Disguise
$25 (half off)

And here are a few more notable games at at least an 80% discount. These are not part of the Black Friday/Cyber Monday promotion and may expire sooner.

Umihara Kawase BaZooKa!
$2.39 (92% off)

Cotton Fantasy
$3.19 (92% off)

Ninja JaJaMaru: The Great Yokai Battle +Hell Edition
$3 (90% off)

Nickelodeon Kart Racers
$3 (90% off)

The Warlock of Firetop Mountain Goblin Scourge Edition
$3 (90% off)

Lego DC Super Villains and Lego The Incredibles
$6 apiece (90% off)

Miraculous: Rise of the Sphinx
$5 (90% off)

Ape Out
$2 (86% off)

Broforce
$2 (86% off)

Cannon Dancer – Osman
$3 (85% off)

Giana Sisters: Twisted Dreams – Owltimate Edition
$5 (83% off)

Cotton 100% and Panorama Cotton
$2 apiece (80% off)

What We’re Playing: Turkey Edition

If it’s not the holidays, it certainly is a holiday, at least for those of us in the US. We’re preparing to load up on turkey, or maybe a vegetarian equivalent. We’re occupied with various other things, so please enjoy this report on some games we’ve been playing.

Of course, Kirby Air Riders has been the main thing for me. I just finished the “true ending” of its story mode, Road Trip, a few minutes ago. It’s bombastic and loud, true, but it was nice to see O², Nightmare and Marx as bosses again, and Galactic Nova, from way back in Kirby Super Star, make a return as part of Kirby’s weird lore. For a series originally about beating up a penguin with royal pretensions because he took everyone’s food, Kirby’s certainly killed a lot of Cthulhus.

Rakshasa from UFO 50, screenshot borrowed (because of laziness) from syltefar.com.

Now that my excuse to talk about that again is out of the way, I’ve been playing more of Party House and Rakshasa in UFO 50. I’ve already said enough about Party House, and I’m working on a revision of my strategy guide; Rakshasa is also something that should have some things said about it, a very short, very hard take on Ghosts & Goblins with a spicy Indian flavor. It’s a game that revels in randomness, and it’s easy to get overwhemed if you don’t stay on your toes at all times. I actually think its big gimmick, that you don’t have lives, but instead must complete a minigame when you perish, of escalating difficulty each time, to be one of the less interesting things about it.

Besides that, I’ve been working my way through Dragon Quest III 2D-HD, which has some quite major design differences from the Famicom/NES game from 1988. Lots to say about that too—just, later. (BTW, if you think using em dashes means something is written by an “AI,” well, I won’t have much kind to say to you about that belief. Please read better writers.)

And then there’s Blippo+. (trailer above, 1¾ minutes) Published by Panic, who also published Untitled Goose Game and Thank Goodness You’re Here!, and first released for Panic’s little portable system that could, the Playdate, Blippo is simply a pitch-perfect rememberance of 90s TV, although as experienced on another planet. It has weird indulgent kids TV (“The Boredome”), classic MTV-style news programming (“The Rubber Report”), D&D-themed fantasy gameshows like from the UK (“Quizzard”) and even a scrambled porn channel, not real porn, but with a sexy lady’s hand caressing mice and monitors (“Tantric Computing”). It’s wrapped up in presentation that kind of looks like adjusting a satellite receiver, and all the shows are like one minute long. It’s weird, unexpected and fun, like everything else Panic makes.

Mechabellum, screenshot borrowed from GameTyrant.

Statue’s most recent focus has been Mechabellum, because as they told me, “I like games that trick me into doing math.” I think one could say that all turn-based strategy games are doing math in one form or another. Math is weird that way.

In addition to all the games they play to review on their Youtube channel Game Wisdom, GWBycer has been playing strategy game Phoenix Point, and its mod Terror From the Void. I didn’t know anything about it until I saw his message about it. Lot of strategy floating around in the air, with Air Riders thrown in to cut it with pure chaos.

WIP Super Mario 64 Port to Playstation

File this under blasphemous acts of hackery, reported on by Video Game Esoterica (Youtube, 10 minutes) and Time Extension, a super-deluxe techno-nuts person going by malucard is trying to port Super Mario 64 to the original Playstation. They have a GitHub repo containing their efforts so far.

The growing number of fan-made decompilations of classic games is what make these hilarious affronts to the very idea of console exclusivity possible. But while ports of such games to PC platforms allow for much greater visual clarity and the resolution of long-standing deficiencies, this is almost a celebration of the idea of technical limitations—and I, for one, am all in favor. But you have to understand, I’ve given serious thought to the idea of picking up an old CP/M machine and coding on it in assembly. I’m crazy pants, is what I’m saying, and on things of this nature you probably shouldn’t be listening to me.

Just look at the footage in that video, and how it’s more glitch than game. It seems impossible that it’ll ever run like the N64 original, but we can dream, can’t we?

Debut Festival Showcase Part 3

Wrapping up my (Josh Bycer’s) coverage of Debut Festival 2025 with more indie game demos.

00:00 Intro
00:24 Felbound
2:07 My Card is Better Than Your Card
4:23 Phase Zero
5:53 Beat, Heart, Beat
6:56 Automatic Kingdom
9:15 Legends of Castile
10:49 Kriophobia

Multilink Monday 11/23/25

Taking another opportunity to get a few tabs out of my browser….

  1. BlipForge retro sound effect generator (itch.io, $8), for when bfxr (web, free) isn’t enough.
  2. Luanti, open-source voxel game engine, for realizing the Minecraft of your dreams.
  3. galacticstudios on the other Star Trek game. The default Star Trek game was a 1971 mainframe game that had a version published in David Ahl’s classic 101 BASIC Computer Games. This game is different from that, it seems.
  4. The Plush Girls Dozen is a collection of fantasy console games; that’s games for fantasy consoles, not fantasy games for consoles. 10 are for PICO-8, two for TIC-80.
  5. The GameBrew emulation wiki. (non-Fandom!)
  6. The Racketboy emulation site.
  7. I linked yesterday about an instance of the Gigantes legendary machine battle in Kirby Air Riders City Trial. Here’s a full game of it, from Gigantes’ point of view. (8 minutes) I hope this doesn’t become a frequent thing, it might be fun once in a while but not if every other game turns into a huge boss battle.