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History Recap / TheAngryVideoGameNerdSeasonThree

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The Nerd dresses up as Batman (the Christian Bale version) so that he can do justice to the variety of games he is about to cover. He starts with Batman: The Caped Crusader for the Commodore 64. He gets annoyed by the game pretty quickly due to the awkward control scheme, in which you have to push the joystick in a certain direction, and then the button in order to perform a variety of attacks or access the menu. In the end, he ends up giving up and slamming the game floppy disc to the ground.

to:

The Nerd dresses up as Batman (the Christian Bale Creator/ChristianBale version) so that he can do justice to the variety of games he is about to cover. He starts with Batman: The Caped Crusader for the Commodore 64. He gets annoyed by the game pretty quickly due to the awkward control scheme, in which you have to push the joystick in a certain direction, and then the button in order to perform a variety of attacks or access the menu. In the end, he ends up giving up and slamming the game floppy disc to the ground.



As the two exchange attacks in the style of the Adam West Batman series, the tone soon shifts as the Nerd fights back harder, beating down the Joker to the ground, before taking all the Batman games he hated and, quite literally, showing all of them up Joker's ass.

to:

As the two exchange attacks in the style of the Adam West Batman series, the tone soon shifts as the Nerd fights back harder, beating down the Joker to the ground, before taking all the Batman games he hated and, quite literally, showing [[AssShove shoving all of them up Joker's ass.ass]].
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The Nerd goes into the transition from the 16-Bit generation of gaming onto the newer generation (from Genesis and SNES to [=N64=] and [=PS1=]), where he mentions about the Virtual Boy (originally called the VR32) that came during the transition to succeed the Gameboy brand with the promise of virtual reality gameplay and 3D effects that can be taken anywhere and observed within the eye pieces. The product ended up in failure and was discontinued indefinitely. The Nerd then observes the system itself and finds it completely impractical as a portable console due to its faulty design, including how the battery pack is attached on the controller (which can be replaced with an proprietary AC adapter) but can be easily removed when it's pressed against the table. Despite this, he does give the console a fair shot (although in order to record it, he had to zoom into the eye piece[[labelnote:*]]This was before he got a Windows PC, meaning he didn't have easy access to an emulator[[/labelnote]]).

to:

The Nerd goes into the transition from the 16-Bit generation of gaming onto the newer generation (from Genesis and SNES to [=N64=] and [=PS1=]), where he mentions about the Virtual Boy (originally called the VR32) [=VR32=]) that came during the transition to succeed the Gameboy brand with the promise of virtual reality gameplay and 3D effects that can be taken anywhere and observed within the eye pieces. The product ended up in failure and was discontinued indefinitely. The Nerd then observes the system itself and finds it completely impractical as a portable console due to its faulty design, including how the battery pack is attached on the controller (which can be replaced with an proprietary AC adapter) but can be easily removed when it's pressed against the table. Despite this, he does give the console a fair shot (although in order to record it, he had to zoom into the eye piece[[labelnote:*]]This was before he got a Windows PC, meaning he didn't have easy access to an emulator[[/labelnote]]).

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