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Gon' E-Choo! Ativador Download [key Serial Number]

alwapensawar

Updated: Dec 8, 2020





















































About This Game 'Gon' E-Choo!' is a 3 stage, arcade-style game based on the earliest arcade platformers. You play as the otter, trying to collect paper airplanes while avoiding the crafty gator and irate bees. Collect them before they fall into the water, or it's game over! Fight back against the insects with your trusty yoyo or read The Junior Guide to Petty Zoological Facts to power up and turn the tables on the gator. Like the games it is based on, 'Gon' E-Choo!' is easy to learn, but hard to master. Casual players will be treated to tricky AI while master players can use the game's non-random patterns to speed run or reach the game's cryptic kill-screen. The game plays out on a virtual arcade cabinet with mechanical sounds recorded straight from arcade cabinets from the early 80s, complete with a simulated CRT monitor and VR support for maximum immersion. 1075eedd30 Title: Gon' E-Choo!Genre: Action, Indie, SimulationDeveloper:Marc EllisPublisher:Marc EllisRelease Date: 25 Nov, 2015 Gon' E-Choo! Ativador Download [key Serial Number] An astounding 3 stage arcade game in the style of Donkey Kong. This game plays like any other arcade game, minus having to pay a quarter each time. The goal is super simple, and there's not much to come back to, but just like any arcade game of the variety, it would be fun to revisit every now and then for a short play session.. Okay, I've played a couple of games, and looked around the back room, and read through the tumblr archives of the comic to the beginning, for good measure. My initial opinion of the game itself is that it plays a great deal like Nintendo's "Popeye" from 1980. You pick up paper airplanes while running from the gator and killing flies with your yoyo, and once per life you can pick up the power-up comic book(?) and devour him instead. Picking up all the airplanes lets you advance to the next lavel.The back room in which the game is situated is an interesting device in itself. It's a dirty back room that looks like a workshop, given the bins of parts and pile of speakers. I'm wondering if there's eventually going to be an easter egg that lets you open that door and see what's beyond. Perhaps something having to do with the letters that appear when you retrieve each airplane.Overall, worth a look for $2, and it'll be interesting to see what'll be coming in the future.. Those with a voracious appetite for classic arcade games will eat this up, but others might find it a bit hard to swallow. If you're hungry for some old-school quarter-munching action, this game costs less than a bite to eat and is something you can sink your teeth into, so it'll give you something to chew on for a while.. The Good:It's a fun-ish formula, peppy music, and a very interesting hub background.The game makes you learn without a tutorial, just like the games of Ye Olde Video Gamme Infancee. It's a plus if you dislike handholding tutorials, but a minus if you have a hard time learning as you go.Otter protagonist. Just, otter.Cute animations.Awesome comic strip to read for lore and immersion.The Bad:Game tries to pass itself off as a "Wowie, look at us! We're super famous." in its universe when I doubt its ability to have more than a cult following at best.Gator game too strong???Absolutely no explanation as to why you're in what appears to be a storeroom. Are you a fan who curates Gon' E-Choo paraphernalia? Are you just some weirdo who walked in and decided it was okay to play this random arcade machine?The Ugly:Oh my word, the sensitivity on this is WAY TOO HIGH. I set it to lowest in options and put my DPI on lowest it could go, and I STILL was flying about. Is this because it's a VR-focused game and head movements are supposed to be minimal?Thankfully, you have the option to skip using the hub entirely and go straight to the game, without any "trappings of reality", but a lot of the magic is misssing when you do that.The Verdict:Come on, its got an otter protagonist. How could you NOT play this?In all seriousness, for its price, it's got decent gameplay, good story, fun music, and a fun level design. A real gem you should consider picking up if you've got $2 to spare. If you invest in the badge it's highly likely you'll make your money back with minimal profit.. This game was made by some degenerate furry, with their vore fetish at the forefront, and I thought I could just buy it, trash it in a review and move on, yet it's one of the best, most authentic arcade experiences I've ever had.I mean look at this. What the heck am I supposed to say? I can't defend what this comic series is about. I don't know\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665about it, but it kind of sickens me. However, if I astral project myself away from this and just think of the game as its own thing, well, I'll explain why I like it.When I first started it, I was confused. "First person perspective? Being able to move around? Why?"Then it hit me when I was playing: The noise. The atmosphere.The sound of the joystick, the click of the button. Playing with a 360 controller, I could swear I was playing with an arcade pad. There's no way you can replicate that in an emulated fashion unless you get yourself one, but even then. There's something about staring down into a simulated CRT monitor of an arcade machine that playing it as any other game wouldn't have given you. Arcade machines were something special - like a big bulky advertising box that wants to sell itself to you. (Or maybe a prostitute comparison is apt here?) Arcade machines were the kind of thing you dreamed of taking home with you, as opposed to some crappy home port no doubt Acclaim had something to do with."Gon' E-Choo!" (I kinda don't like that name) is as it says on the tin: A 3 stage "platformer" where you collect letters (The paper kind. Although for awhile I thought they were white hats for some reason) while avoiding a gator and bees. Avoiding the gator is just plain fun, like a primitive stealth game, where obfuscating simple AI patterns feels like you're tricking something - like showing a dog a mirror and it thinks its own reflection is another dog. There's not a whole lot to discuss here besides the sublime, simplistic design, which yes, does take its cues from Popeye - but you know what? I like Popeye, but the game is different enough from it that it's not an outright clone. At worst, I'd call it an extremely well done rom hack that adds new levels, as opposed to how I think of it as an homage to a classic. (It even has similar Thru signs.) In fact, the game feels very much like a love letter to arcades. If you look around the room you're in, you'll find fictional flyers and the guts\/parts of an arcade machine you can examine. There's also a tape player you can blare over the music and sound of the game. (A nice touch is that you can turn off the arcade machines music and just leave the SFX on, which is pretty awesome. Custom music tape mod when?)So I've gushed about it. Any problems? Well... there is kind of one, but it's not in the way you think. You see, it's the controls. They're far too precise. With a keyboard, the game works as you'd expect, the problem is the Xbox 360 controller. It was never truly precise, it's a good controller that fits a lot of games like a glove, but for Gon E-Choo, I got myself into a few too many pickles I knew I could have prevented if I was using something better. At the same time though, I want to use a controller for this game, cause it's the right kind of game for it.For minor problems, I guess the side panelling of the arcade machine could be more eye catching. I mean I could be wrong, but how common are arcade machines with black and white comics on the sides of it? Maybe the power up could serve more of a purpose than letting you eat the gator? Maybe a mini game like a lot of later arcade games started adding? I don't know, at this point I'm nitpicking.I know furries are a punchline, but this more than anything proves to me that a person can have bad taste in fetishes, but they can have supremely excellent taste in video game design. I think a lot of indie devs that think they're "totally like, making retro games, man" could learn a lot from this title. I recommend it.The Pro's:+Feels absolutely authentic+Throwback arcade design that's still fun today+First person view adds a lot to the immersion+The price is excellentThe Con's:-Vore... furries... oh god-360 controller is just too imprecise for such a precise game. Man, I love this game! I remember playing Popeye on my friend's old Atari... Or maybe it was the Colecovision? Okay, I don't really remember the game all that well but I remember loving it. What's not to love? You've got gators chasing you wanting to eat you, mysterious garage of wonders and old motherboards, and 50s style comics on a nearby table. It's a fun three-level game with an ever-increasing difficulty and an ending nobody has seen yet. That's right, you can be the first to see a kill-screen ending before EVERYONE ELSE. You'll get street cred. If you have to choose between 1 game featuring gators this year and you don't want to play Bayou Billy for the billionth time, get this game.If this game has any problems is that the first level can be somewhat difficult for beginners. And I had a few other gripes, but with the game's newest patches a lot of the problems have been fixed. It's a game that's easy to pick up, difficult to master, and very fun and goofy.Tl;dr version:Gators. That is all. 19.45\/10. Very fun and quite difficult. The music and graphics are spot on for an 80's arcade game. I'm also really digging the overall look of the arcade cabinet. Lots of nice little touches too, like the cabinet joystick moving along with the player's actions. I kinda geeked out when I saw scan lines on the game screen, simulating an old CRT monitor.A treat for fans of arcade classics and totally worth the asking price.10\/10 will try to not get eaten again.

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