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20. Yo!  Noid (NES)
 

 
Yo! Noid is about as much fun as eating left over pizza that's been thrown away in the garbage a week earlier.   When an advertising slogan gets put to a video game, you can be sure it's total ass.  This game is no exception.   "Yo Noid" may be the best example of idiots in marketing who think that anything can be translated to a video game.  This game is grotesquely difficult, much like the side-scrolling style of difficulty found in "Ghost's 'n Goblins".   What's more annoying though is having absolutely no energy and no suit to protect you from just one enemy killing you. Even the smallest enemy within a proximate vicinity can dominate the Noid into oblivion, making you wonder why the hell the Noid took it upon himself to save New York City.  His weapon is a yo-yo, not a magic yo-yo like we find in Star Tropics, but a standard yo-yo, making you wonder even more why the Noid thinks he can save New York City with no stamina and a fucking toy yo-yo.   If you happen to embody video game luck beyond all understandable limits and get to the end of a level, you are put into a pizza eating contest while the city is on fire making the Noid a hero with no stamina, a bad weapon, and no dedication to the task at hand.   What's worse, if you lose the pizza eating contest, you have to start the insuperable level over again.  At that point, you throw the cartridge out the window and remain validated in your consciousness of how bad an idea it always was to take a banal advertising signifier and assume it will be successful as a video game.   I don't think I ever ate at Dominos after playing this egregious excuse for a video game.
 
19. Fester's Quest (NES)
 

 
While some of the greatest video games of all time were released on the 8 bit NES, it also had some of the industry's biggest misses as well.  Fester's Quest is one of the best examples of this phenomena.  As a matter of fact, I can safely say that I'd rather play almost anything on Dreamcast than ever play this game again.  Loosely based off the 1960's T.V. show The Adams Family, Fester's Quest follows Uncle Fester as he attempts to save his town from an alien invasion.  What?  Yeah, you heard right, and if anyone can tell me how that storyline makes any sense, please feel free to email me.  O.K., ridiculous premise aside, this game is just plain dumb.  And as with many of the games on our top 20 worst video games of all time list, Fester's Quest is also impossibly difficult.  If you died even once, you had to start the entire game completely over again, making it not only hard but incredibly tedious and frustrating.  There's almost no redeeming qualities to this game, other than the sound effects, which are lifted right from Blaster Master anyway, another Sunsoft game, and a game that actually makes it to our top 100 BEST video games of all time list.  Unfortunately, Sunsoft couldn't repeat that brillant success with this atrocious game. 
 
18. Skate or Die (NES) 
 
  
 
Skate or die? I would rather die then have to play skate or die ever again in this life time. The title screen shows some paltry loser who you want to beat on for looking so clownish. The game irritates you even more. You skate around different areas with the same ramps, same couple of maneuvers, and same impossible controller issues. Then when you finish an area you are bombarded with the same loser from the title screen, this time taking up even more space with his massive poaching noggin (who in their right mind would ever have a mo-hawk?) If your going to make a game called Skate or Die, how can it be one of the most pedestrian games ever made? Is it supposed to feel cutting edge because I'm looking at some goon with an ugly green mo-hawk? At least show a little bit of blood or anger when failing at these boring courses to merit the name skate or die. The same circle of courses proved to be quickly tedious, with little extra to spark any interest in playing further than five minutes, except if you like looking at 8-bit graphics of infirm skaters that may bring images of a "cool dude" flashing the rock hand signal at you when you were doing something cool. I suspect there are some people who like this trash. These people I should never meet, God willing.
  
 
17.  Where's Waldo (NES)
 

 
Who would have ever thought this would have been a good idea?  Okay, maybe if you were going to turn this NES installment into a superhero fighting game where Waldo had superpowers like something coming out of his glasses, but this installment turns out to be the same exact concept as the books, but only worse.  At least in the books, you could spot Waldo, the graphics and objects for the NES "Where's Waldo" are so poor that everything equally looks like shit making it impossible to have any chance at finding him.  Why not just stick with the books though in the first place?  Who in their right would buy this game?  It's hard to imagine even 5 of these games being sold.  Could you imagine anyone admitting to buying this dung when you could buy the nice clear, iridescent books?  "Where's Waldo" consists of a big screen with a cursor moving around over non-descript objects.  You would think the sales department would have something to say about this.  But as with other games that were brought from the TV screen to platform console, all that mattered was cashing in on a good idea, no matter how bad the idea was for the video game system.
 
16.  Fatal Fury (Neo Geo)
 

 
Fatal Fury was fun to play for 2 seconds because of how obvious of a rip off it was of Street Fighter.  It was the poor mans Street Fighter, literally and figuratively.  The characters were poorly conceived, the after-fight dialogues were a monstrosity of van damnesque platitudes, and the final boss was about as scary as a 4th grade trick or treater in a wonder woman outfit.  Your friend bought this game when he couldn't afford the real street fighter which would go anywhere from $40-$50 dollars.  Fatal Fury was a $20 dollar game and it showed.  This however did not stop your friend from calling you up and saying "I got this game Fatal Fury that may be better than street fighter", much to your laughter as you realize your friend made a competition out of who had the better video games (These are the people you would often find with books lying around entitled "How to start a conversation and make friends").  Fatal Fury remains one of the more poor attempts at a 2 player coin-op style fighting game.  Combine goofy characters with derivative moves and conspicuous hopes of being "the next street fighter", and you will get this impoverished piece of crap.  
 
 




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