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![]() "Three things are of utmost importance: courage, wisdom, and friendship." "EarthBound is not just one of the greatest RPGs of all time. And EarthBound is not just one of the greatest games on the Super Nintendo. EarthBound is, quite simply, one of the greatest games ever made." There are games that are underappreciated. There are games that are cult classics. There are games with fanbases devoted enough to go to any lengths necessary to spread the word for anyone with an ear to listen.And then there's EarthBound.EarthBound is a SNES game about Ness, a seemingly normal boy in Eagleland who is awakened by a meteorite landing outside town late at night. The meteorite brings a bee (or not) from the future, who tells of its devastation at the hands of an indestructible being, Giygas — a being Ness is destined to defeat. Ness' journey to stop Giygas will take him through time and space to meet the remainder of the Chosen Four (Paula, Jeff, and Poo) and collect the Eight Melodies for his Sound Stone to unite the power of the Earth as his own.EarthBound is the second of a series of Japanese role playing games known as MOTHER, an experiment in storytelling in a different medium by Japanese essayist Shigesato Itoi. It's known as MOTHER 2: Gyiyg Strikes Back in Japan and serves as a loose sequel to MOTHER, since the setting of MOTHER 1 and MOTHER 2/EarthBound are essentially the same (an affectionate homage to 1950s America). EarthBound is the only game in the series to receive an official release in North America (as Nintendo has no plans for a North American release for MOTHER 3).MOTHER 1 was originally planned for North American release and was originally titled Earth Bound, but Nintendo of America scrapped release plans after work on its translation was completed since the Super Nintendo had already launched (making it Nintendo's major focus). A prototype of the translation game surfaced years later in the hands of a collector; this ROM was dumped and eventually released as Earthbound Zero.EarthBound is best known for its unusual gameplay: fantasy monster-slaying gives way to a modern-day urban setting, with slingshots, frying pans, and baseball bats taking the place of swords, axes, and magic staffs. Rather than goblins and orcs and other fantasy creatures, Ness and his friends battle drunks, hippies, angry taxicabs, a cult dedicated to worshipping the color blue, and a giant circus tent. Most of EarthBound's humor focuses on how the West is viewed by other countries (Asia/Japan in particular), with references to The Beatles and The Blues Brothers scattered throughout the game. EarthBound's level of Nightmare Fuel is perhaps more famous than its quirky humor; amongst the major sources of terror are a profoundly disturbing final dungeon and a final boss whose genuinely chilling Mind Screw horror has led to tons and tons of Memetic Mutation.The North American release of EarthBound is notable for including an official Strategy Guide with every copy despite costing as much as other games of its day (a sign of how much faith Nintendo had in the game's ability to sell). Due to an odd — and failed — advertising campaignEarthBound is the Trope Namer of:
And the former Trope namer for:Tropes present in EarthBound:
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