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Platform Hell
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- 63 feature instances
- 132 referencing feature instances
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If you want a picture of the future, imagine a plumber jumping into an invisible coin block and falling to his death, repeatedly — forever. Video game protagonists often have bad days. It's not uncommon to have to Double Jump between Floating Platforms over spiked pits, dash between three sets of synchronized fire vents, then bounce off a flying enemy to hit an item block, all while dodging those Goddamned Bats and Demonic Spiders. It may be fiendishly difficult, but it's still par for the course. But not like this. Not like this. The first item block? Falls and crushes you when you hit it! The pit spikes? Shoot freaking lasers that slice you to bits when you jump over them and that's if they don't move themselves to where you would originally land! The safe platform at the other end? Suddenly tilts sideways for no reason at all! The harmless bush you just walked past? Grows teeth and bites your head off! The tiny white cloud that you thought was part of the background? Just blasted you with lightning! The secret Warp Zone you found? Sends you back to the first level of the game! And when you finally, finally get that precious Super Mushroom? Makes you grow so monstrously huge that the floor cracks in half and you plunge into the center of the Earth. Might we be the first to say... welcome to Hell. Platform Hell. This isn't just Nintendo Hard; it's actively sadistic. Every platform has booby-trapped spikes. Every empty hallway has a wall of cannons waiting just offscreen. Most of the power-ups will kill you or impede your progress, but every power-up that doesn't is absolutely necessary for survival. The Kaizo Trap isn't a nasty surprise; it's an inevitability. And just when you think you've figured out the twisted mind of the game designer, something incomparably worse gets thrown at you. The entire experience is a humongous, hilariously sadistic Kafkaesque parody of a Darker and Edgier Nintendo Hard video game. As a rule of thumb, a Platform Hell game should meet several of the following criteria: Difficulty as slapstick comedy: these games try to make their sudden and completely unfair deaths so ridiculous as to be hilarious. The player engages in self-aimed Comedic Sociopathy. Difficulty as a Running Gag: The difficulty never, ever lets up, and after a while, becomes ludicrous in its sheer persistence. Self-awareness: The aforementioned comedy often comes from the game knowing exactly what the player is going to do, and catching them when they least expect it. Difficulty as parody and/or deconstruction: These games take well-known video game challenges, such as Mega Man's disappearing blocks, to completely unreasonable conclusions. Twisted familiarity: The game levels generally fit the classic settings of the game they're based on, and theme their deathtraps and challenges appropriately. This also has the practical benefit of saving time in level editing. Even original games such as I Wanna Be the Guy are generally one big Nostalgia Level From Hell. Typical "traps" in these games include: Invisible blocks: Some of them will just be there to trip you up (as in the picture above), some need to be hit in order to pass a seemingly impassable obstacle, and some will leave you trapped and unable to do anything but quit and try again from the beginning of the stage. In games that don't let you quit a stage whenever you want (or only let you do so once you've already beaten the stage), your only option is to wait out the time limit and die, and therefore be tortured with boredom. If there is no time limit, then you'll be forced to reset the entire game, potentially losing a lot of progress. Background elements actually being treated as foreground elements (e.g. those "mountains" that look just like a dozen others you've harmlessly passed by are actually Spikes of Doom). Traps at the end of the stage that will kill you unless you've prepared something from the beginning of the stage, such as the (in)famous "Kaizo Trap" in Super Mario World ROM Hacks, which required you to use a P-Switch before crossing the goal to prevent Mario from automatically walking into a pit and dying during the victory fanfare. Traps at the beginning of the stage that will kill you unless you act immediately after entering. Trial-and-Error Gameplay, typically in the form of paths that look like they lead somewhere interesting but instead drop you into inescapable Death Traps... or paths that look like they lead into inescapable death traps but are actually the correct way to progress. Killing you in the intro cut scene before the game actually begins, especially in Super Mario World hack examples. Too-good-to-be-true items that are either used to bait you into a trap (sometimes the trap is triggered before you get the item, other times the item is the trigger) or are actually lethal on contact. Pit Traps and Fake Platforms that look exactly the same as solid ground and real platforms, respectively. Requiring the player to play as a One-Hit-Point Wonder. If you're ever given a powerup that lets you take an extra hit, then "trap at the end of the stage kills you unless you've prepared something from the beginning" is most likely in effect and you will be forced to take unavoidable damage later, meaning you still have to go through the majority of the stage without getting hit, which may actually be harder than playing through the stage without the powerup since some games increase the protagonist's size (and therefore the size of their hitbox) upon picking it up (e.g. Mario games). They will also usually go by names that outright suggest the cruel difficulty and trickery contained within, usually with names based on 'hard', 'impossible', 'difficult' and 'unfair'. For obvious reasons, very few commercial companies would dare release a game like this. Hence, this variety of videogame is almost entirely the domain of ROM Hacks and homebrew. ROM Hacks especially are made for game emulators, which almost always have a save state function, so it's fully expected that the player will be taking advantage of it as much as possible. Also known as "Masocore", after this blog postnote Although, the term "masocore" is subtly broader — referring simply to "player death as narrative technique". cactus's Psychosomnium, for instance, is masocore but not Platform Hell in the least. This should not be confused with very Nintendo Hard games like Jumper, N, and Battletoads, which, while being immensely difficult, play (mostly) fair and straight. A Platform Hell game is intentionally unfair by design, and plays that unfair Fake Difficulty as a sort of slapstick humor in which the audience, or rather, the player, is the comedic victim. It should also not be confused with masochism-themed games like Mighty Jill Off, which are more homage than parody. They're also sometimes known as 'Kaizo' hacks after Kaizo Mario World, as well as 'Pit' hacks (if they're so difficult as to be impossible with normal human reflexes). The Trope Maker is Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (the Japanese Super Mario Bros. 2), which intentionally screwed with all the tropes of the previous entries: Warp Zones that returned you to already completed worlds, land-based enemies now appearing in the water and underwater enemies floating in the air, springs that bounce Mario far beyond the top of the screen, winds that play hell with your momentum, invisible power-up blocks to be hit as you attempt to make a jump and, of course, the Poison Mushroom, often dispensed by hitting a block only reached by a crazy difficult series of jumps. Its trolling elements would be exaggerated by other developers, but its frustrating aspects went so far beyond Nintendo Hard that its original NES version was never released in America. Compare/Contrast Bullet Hell games, which are Shoot 'Em Up games with exaggerated projectile volume, but generally play more fair, and what you see is what you get. Often these levels can be a much more dangerous version of a Level of Tedious Enemies, except that the enemies now pose a genuine threat to platforming. |
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Platform Hell / int_108cd205 | type |
Platform Hell | |
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Wizardry IV: The Return of Werdna is RPG Dungeon Crawler Hell. You know how weak the average monster in a Random Encounter is compared to RPG heroes? Well, in this game, you're on the side of the monsters. Not only that, but the puzzles take Guide Dang It! to an extreme; most players won't even make it out of the first room without outside assistance. The same can be said about Samuel Stoddard (of RinkWorks fame)'s dungeon crawler Murkon's Vengeance, which is basically a homage to Wizardry IV in every way. Including the difficulty. Watch as your 10-hitpoint-1-damage-dealing character barely scratches the enemies less than half of the time and spends the rest "too scared to act". |
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Platform Hell / int_125f31da | type |
Platform Hell | |
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The Divide: Enemies Within have increasingly insane amount of platforming areas as the game goes on, to the point that you can spend minutes jumping around just to get to the next area. Miss a jump and if you survive, get ready to restart from the nearest drop-point. The fact that a lot of these are Temporary Platforms doesn't help either. | |
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The Divide: Enemies Within (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell | |
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Distorted Travesty can get like this in some of the later levels, but Distorted Travesty 2 really takes it up a notch. The character in the sequel has a lot more ways to keep herself airborne (a double jump, the ability to float for a couple seconds, infinite wall jumps, and an air dash)... so, naturally, the creator took this opportunity to design some truly sadistic platforming sequences that are a challenge even with all those abilities. Notably, there are a couple of sequences in the final level where, aside from the entrance and exit, you are airborne for the entire room, with no safe ground to land on and rest anywhere. | |
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And Takeshi's Castle, which has been beaten by a total of nine people. | |
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Guild Wars 2 has a Super Adventure Box "dungeon" which amounts to a platforming game-within-a-game, with blocky, colorful graphics, chiptune music, and design sensibilities from NES-era games. Then you have Tribulation difficulty, a clear attempt to recreate I Wanna Be The Guy in an MMORPG engine. It comes complete with countless invisible spike traps, invisible lava pits, power-ups replaced with explosive barrels, and even an equivalent to invisible blocks (solid clouds which suddenly appear, cutting certain jumps short). In most areas where the normal difficulty already required near-perfect maneuvering, Arenanet simply added an invulnerable lightning-spewing psycho-raincloud to the area, forcing you to either rush through or dodge carefully. Outside of SAB, many of the game's jumping puzzles can verge on this when they incorporate traps, enemies, precise jumps, and respawn points positioned so the player will have to run the entire puzzle all over again. The biggest offender is Troll's Revenge, a meandering rooftop, cliffside, spelunking, tightrope trek through the updated Lion's Arch. A complete run with minimal errors can take 17 minutes. A fall at any point on the run requires a start-over and the run itself is often incomprehensibly convoluted and exacting in precision. Without a mesmer who can create portals for people who fall off, an average run is 3 hours. |
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Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony has the "Death Road of Despair", an extremely challenging platform game filled with many extremely hard to avoid and often invisible traps, made harder with slippery, stiff controls and by the fact that your 16 extra lives are represented by you taking control of another character once your current one is defeated, but said characters follow behind you and are still vulnerable even when not being controlled, meaning that even if you successfully avoid a trap, you may still end up losing many lives. In-Universe, it's meant to be a method of emotional torture for the main characters, tantalizing them with a possibility of escaping the killing game but making it extremely unlikely they will succeed, even players will be woefully unprepared for it. If you manage to clear it, all you get rewarded with is a Downer Ending and a menu skin. Later in the game, you get to go back there armed with special hammers that can disable any trap, making it much easier. | |
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Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell / int_1fc3ec4d | type |
Platform Hell | |
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Rock Band DLC song, "Operation Pound and Ground" is also at this level despite being an official chart. It's freakishly over-charted and over 7 minutes long with multiple runs over 25 notes-per-second and 2 insane solos. It took a long time for an FC of this song. | |
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Rock Band (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell | |
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Wild Woody for the Sega CD. The game stars the titular Mascot with Attitude, Woody, a pencil given life by an talking totem head statue to return his brothers and save the world. The game itself is annoying difficult as the controls are heavy and unresponsive, setting objects like mushrooms hurt you for whatever reason, power-ups and their sections add extra difficulty because you can't see what's up ahead, and the only way to beat enemies is a gamble as the controls don't always register that you tried to erase a mook so you'll take yet another hit. The game received negative reviews and didn't help the Sega CD's small library of games to stand out to the Sony Playstation or the Sega Saturn. | |
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Wild Woody (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell / int_28c24e67 | type |
Platform Hell | |
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Kaizo Trap, combining the worst aspects of Checkpoint Starvation, Bullet Hell, and Trapped in TV Land, and the best of The Power of Love. Oddly enough, the actual Kaizo Trap trope is subverted. | |
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Platform Hell | |
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Half-Quake is a series of Half-Life mods - with two of its installments predating I Wanna Be The Guy and Kazio Mario World - which take Half Life and turn it into First Person Shooter/Platformer/Puzzle Hell. | |
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Platform Hell / int_3623e01d | type |
Platform Hell | |
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Iter Vehemens Ad Necem, which means "A Violent Road To Death", is the Roguelike equivalent. It is not kidding. The fact that some people can beat the game is generally considered a bug. | |
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Platform Hell / int_390729ff | type |
Platform Hell | |
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Non-video game example: Ninja Warrior. Hopping around obstacles of varying difficulty within a time limit is harder than it looks, especially since only four people beat the obstacle course. (And only one has repeated his victory) To be specific, there have been 31 Ninja Warrior tournaments held, each with 100 contestants. So 4 out of 3,100 people have passed it...a whopping 0.13% success rate. There's also the Ninja Warrior flash game. "Just like the real thing, you should not expect to complete this course easily or on the first try. Do you have the timing, reflexes and resolve to complete our Sasuke and become the next NINJA WARRIOR?" And Takeshi's Castle, which has been beaten by a total of nine people. Ditto for Wipeout (2008), which also has a Wii adaptation. |
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Platform Hell | |
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Happy Wheels tends to have user-generated levels fall into one of three categories: story/travel levels that you ride through with little to no effort; "effect" levels like dominoes, glitches, etc; and obstacle courses. The obstacle courses, if done well, are Nintendo Hard. If not done well, or if done by a sadistic designer, fall very firmly into this category. | |
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Platform Hell / int_45501b8c | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_45501b8c | comment |
Super Metroid hacks often veer into this category at times. An example is this segment from Super Metroid Redesign. For a long time, arguably the only two well-known hacks that didn't were Metroid Legacy and Golden Dawn, and even Golden Dawn probably comes close in a couple of places (if you can't wall jump, you won't even be able to get past the opening segment). However, some recent hacks like Vitality and Hyper Metroid have more comparable difficulty to the original game. The most prominent example is literally called Super Metroid Impossible. It has the same world map as the original Super Metroid, except with badly-damaging spikes scattered throughout Zebes, forced mockballing and bomb-jumping, escape sequences with time limits so tight that the slightest slow-down will result in failure, normally-accessible areas in the original now blocked off by green, yellow, or metal doors, and key items rearranged into the most assholish places. It was made in 2006 by a Tool-Assisted Speedrun author, for Tool-Assisted Speedruns authors, and for long wasn't thought possible by a human. Take a look. Multiple human players have now run Super Metroid Impossible deathless, including Oatsngoats, azder, and hotarubi, and zoast, the world record holder as of October 2021. (Oatsngoats and hotarubi are former world record holders for Super Metroid itself; zoast still holds SM world records in numerous categories.) Oats also ran the game at AGDQ 2020; he died five times to Ridley and reset once at Mother Brain. (Ironically, Draygon is generally considered the toughest fight in this hack.) A better indicator of the hack's difficulty, however, is to watch zoast play through the hack for (mostly) the first time, having only seen other players run it. It took him about nine hours over several days, and he divided the YouTube video into two videos. Super Metroid Impossible has probably now been topped by Super Metroid Discord, created by the creator of Mario Must Die (see above). Unlike Impossible, however, Discord has little in common with the original game in terms of its design, having much more to do with Kaizo Mario World and other Mario hacks. Kaizo Super Metroid also exists; here's a TAS. This one is substantially more difficult than Impossible, so a Kaizo Possible version was created to be completable by human runners; nonetheless, Oatsngoats played through a good portion of the original (here are parts one, two, and three). Oats also has a deathless run of Kaizo Possible. |
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Platform Hell / int_49a88442 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_49a88442 | comment |
In Final Fantasy XIV, every summer during Moonfire Faire, there's an obstacle course mini-game where you jump across platforms to earn some event points to trade for seasonal items. Getting to the goal isn't too hard, but if you want to, you can climb up to the very top of the towering structure by jumping across the many tiny platforms and pillars leading up to it, with almost no safety drops. You don't get anything for reaching the top, so taking on this hellish challenge is on your own volition. Some Sightseeing Logs are located in high-up places inside towns (so no flying) that require some serious jumping skills to reach. The Kugane Tower jumping puzzle in Stormblood is one of the most infamous ones. |
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Platform Hell / int_559a3948 | type |
Platform Hell | |
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The Impossible DLC Pack in New Super Mario Bros. 2, seriously. The pack includes three levels that have various enemies thrown at you at slow screen speeds, wall jumps needed to be done while avoiding fire bars in a narrow area, and traversing a large hallway full of Fire Bros., chainsaws, and flamethrowers with a poison pond that rises rapidly at certain points, in that order. Buy it now for $2.50. | |
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Platform Hell / int_58bceb41 | type |
Platform Hell | |
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Christos Owen, one of the developers of the randomizer for The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past, made a "Kaizomizer" for the game which... well, rather than try to describe it, it's probably best to just let you watch speedrunner Andy Laso run it yourself. Hilarity Ensues, of course. | |
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Platform Hell / int_58fe055d | type |
Platform Hell | |
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raocow is rather infamous for his ability to design absurdly insane levels. He published his own Super Mario World rom hack, What The Hell, full of invincible enemies and the craziest jumps imaginable, and has submitted levels to several collaborative hacks- they were used as part of the last world or as a Brutal Bonus Level. He eventually lowered the sadism factor after being forced to play through several of them when let's playing those games, and now considers them Old Shame. | |
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raocow (Lets Play) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell | |
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1001 Spikes is all about this. The difficulty is somewhere between Meat Boy and I Wanna Be the Guy, giving your difficult platforming with semi-frequent psychic-powers-requiring death traps. Most common of those death traps are spikes that unexpectedly come out from the ground but they can also take form of collapsing floor tiles. | |
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Mutant Mudds is typically Nintendo Hard, but then you beat the game and unlock Grannie as a playable character. Unlike protagonist Max, who can only use one power up at a time, Grannie has all three power-ups. She also has twenty of her own secret levels. Surely they must be easy, because she has every power, right? Wrong. In addition to being lined with Spikes of Doom and featuring truly brutal enemy placement, the levels are based around using all of those powers at once, like forcing you to hover across giant, spike-filled gaps you can barely make, while shooting lots of flying enemies, and at the end, you have to do a well-timed Rocket Jump just as you run out of hover power. They're brutal. | |
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Platform Hell | |
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Many ROM hacks of Super Mario Bros. 3, eg Ultimate SMB3, are like this. | |
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Platform Hell | |
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Sonic the Hedgehog - YOLO Edition is a rom hack where you only have one life to beat the game. There are no rings, checkpoints, extra lives, or continues (the score is frozen at 0), every monitor is a Robotnik monitor that will kill you, and cheats don't even work (level select sends you to the beginning no matter what you select). | |
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Platform Hell / int_660aec8 | type |
Platform Hell | |
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All of these have been outdone by Armageddon. It uses every TAS technique and glitch known as of its release in 2021 (including the ones in Glitch Abuse and many newly discovered ones), is longer than Colon Three and the last room requires you to do arbitrary code execution to complete it. The full clear is a spectacle to watch. | |
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Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_6bf2d08 | comment |
Super Mario Maker: "My First Course", which is presented as a course designed by Mary O. (the woman from the game's digital manual). The course elements are haphazardly placed, there are a lot of cheap traps, and it is risky to collect the only power-up in the course and emerge unscathed. This was justified as Mary O. still being a rookie. On the the Japanese page presenting the course, Mary O.'s course-making teacher Yamamura was a tad unhappy about it. Of course, given the main concept of the game, there's nothing stopping level creators from making devious platform hell courses. The higher levels of the 100 Mario Challenge were at one point so thickly saturated with them that Super Expert mode was seemingly created just to store them all. While the game does require you to beat your own course before publishing it (otherwise the course list would be populated with Unwinnable Joke Game courses), it hasn't stopped very skilled players from successfully publishing Kaizo-esque courses for others to flip tables over. You can also expect tons of the hardest courses to be riddled with Fake Difficulty and dirty tricks. Just a few of the MANY examples include kaizo blocks that will ruin your jump when you least expect it, pick a door/pick a pipe where all but one will kill you with no indication which is right (god help you if it's at the end of a difficult level, and they can be randomized as well), hard to find developer shortcuts that allow them a way to skip challenging parts of the level, possibly leaving it Unwinnable legitimately, levels designed to waste as much of your time as possible performing tedious tasks, hiding an invisible block with a key or star needed to exit the level hidden somewhere in a vast level, blind jumps with no indication which direction you need to go to land safely, and sections that require you to do something seemingly stupid to survive, dying if you take the seemingly correct path (or the reverse). Oh, and all of these and more may be and probably are going to be combined, amplifying each other to make some of the worst levels imaginable. Be glad there's a skip button. |
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Platform Hell / int_6bf2d08 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_6bf2d08 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Mario Maker (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_6bf2d08 | |
Platform Hell / int_766868db | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_766868db | comment |
A hack of Super Mario World, "The Second Reality Project," has various Nintendo Hard levels, especially in the last few worlds. However, the very last level is a very hard level. It goes like this, you go to Bowser's Airship and once you're there, you are forced to shrink into Small Mario and go through about 16 of the hardest rooms (Including spinjumping on top of spike balls, floating with the balloon in a room full of spikes, going through a tower-like room with a bunch of Football Kicking Charging Chucks, swimming in a room full of Torpedo Teds, dodging giant spikes, and more) without getting hit once. The level is very tough and there is no checkpoint. In a newer version of the hack, "The Second Reality Project Reloaded," the level is remodified to where there is a powerup in every room and a checkpoint is offered after going through most of those rooms. | |
Platform Hell / int_766868db | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_766868db | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Second Reality Project (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_766868db | |
Platform Hell / int_76ad2012 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_76ad2012 | comment |
Five Nights at Freddy's World includes one of these in its post release update. The issue isn’t so much the minigame itself, it’s the game's titular Rainbow, who is a massive jerk that mocks the player for dying and even kills them if they die too much. Said Rainbow even decides to replace the intended boss for the update and carry over the flagrant unfairness of her game to the fight. | |
Platform Hell / int_76ad2012 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_76ad2012 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Five Nights at Freddy's World (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_76ad2012 | |
Platform Hell / int_77aa72de | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_77aa72de | comment |
I Wanna Be the Guy: The Movie: The Game - confirmed to be directly inspired by Jinsei Owata no Daiboukennote At the time IWBTG was made, Owata was unfinished. By the time the webgame was completed, IWBTG had achieved its infamy as a super-hard game inspired by Owata, hence the homage Owata put in its final levels.. In this game, everything really is Trying To Kill You, even apples. Which fall upwards. At one point, the moon gets dropped on you, several times. At another, a save point tries to eat you. Find it in all its horrible, hair-tearing glory here. One of the traps in the game occurs during a pre-boss cutscene with Dracula. Near the end of the cutscene, in the middle of a line, he throws his wineglass at you, and unless you move while Dracula is still talking to you, you will die. Incidentally, you also cannot move until he throws the glass. Only a handful of people in the entire world have been confirmed to beat the game on Impossible (meaning no save points). The official comment to the first time this happened was "holy crap you're not serious are you". The official list on the forums has only 509 unique people to clear it, including the creator (who is not anywhere near first on the list). The best-known impossible-clearer created a separate fangame and game engine. The sequel, I Wanna Save The Kids, is an Escort Mission from hell. As if that wasn't redundant enough. One notable fangame is the aptly named I Wanna See You Suffer, by UltraJMan, which was created as revenge on the people who recommended his maddening, rage-inducing run through I Wanna Be The Fangame, and it shows. The first thing that'll happen when you spawn is that you die, and it will take you approximately 10-30 minutes to get past that first obstacle and reach a breather point. That's 1/3rd of the first game screen. After that, the game will stop treating you nicely; there are numerous routes you can go, and most of them lead to dead ends after 2-4 soul crushingly difficult screens... the game's official key features are that it is "unfair, precise, and unfun". |
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Platform Hell / int_77aa72de | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_77aa72de | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
I Wanna Be the Guy (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_77aa72de | |
Platform Hell / int_77ba7f66 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_77ba7f66 | comment |
Ditto for Wipeout (2008), which also has a Wii adaptation. | |
Platform Hell / int_77ba7f66 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_77ba7f66 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Wipeout (2008) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_77ba7f66 | |
Platform Hell / int_7f87968e | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_7f87968e | comment |
The Kaizo scene has even extended into Pokémon territory with Pokémon Blue Kaizo. Even from the first battle of the game, you know this game is going to be insane when you see that your rival's starter Pokemon is Mew! | |
Platform Hell / int_7f87968e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_7f87968e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Pokemon Blue Kaizo (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_7f87968e | |
Platform Hell / int_803beb04 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_803beb04 | comment |
A brief sampler of said "solutions": Finding a completely invisible button to click on a white field, choosing an answer in a multiple choice question where the answers have nothing to do with the question, are not in english, or are blank, and right clicking on the window to deactivate the Flash control to keep the program from failing younote This was possibly inspired by the quiz level in Earthworm Jim 2, which was only a Bonus Level but had answers such as 'B. A' and 'C. Come on, I really need this powerup!'. The game does let you skip some questions, but you'll need every skip available to pass the final question. This was quite intentional. | |
Platform Hell / int_803beb04 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_803beb04 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Earthworm Jim (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_803beb04 | |
Platform Hell / int_82770af8 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_82770af8 | comment |
The Rick Dangerous series. Both games are full of hidden traps, spikes that only appear the moment they kill you, and hidden missile throwers. To top it off, you only have a limited amount of lives and no continues. | |
Platform Hell / int_82770af8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_82770af8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Rick Dangerous (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_82770af8 | |
Platform Hell / int_8371a70c | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_8371a70c | comment |
Ms. 'Splosion Man. 'Splosion Man was hard enough, but from World 1-2 on, the sequel takes it further. | |
Platform Hell / int_8371a70c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_8371a70c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Ms. 'Splosion Man (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_8371a70c | |
Platform Hell / int_85e32df4 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_85e32df4 | comment |
Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, as mentioned above, is the Trope Maker and one of the few commercial releases that falls under this trope (though its difficulty was not the sole reason it was not initially released outside of Japan, as being a Mission-Pack Sequel was also a factor). It is also worth noting that every subsequent release of the game nerfed the difficulty in some way or another. | |
Platform Hell / int_85e32df4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_85e32df4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_85e32df4 | |
Platform Hell / int_86814ea1 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_86814ea1 | comment |
Final Fantasy XV has the Pitioss Dungeon which dumps the games combat mechanics for pure platforming with many challenges that that play this trope straight. | |
Platform Hell / int_86814ea1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_86814ea1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Final Fantasy XV (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_86814ea1 | |
Platform Hell / int_8a40b4a6 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_8a40b4a6 | comment |
Dust Force veered into the higher end of Nintendo Hard with levels such as Zeta and Yotta difficult, but with the DX update they included one hidden level found by trying to create a custom level and naming it "exec func ruin user"note This code found letter-by-letter near the hidden apples scattered through the game. which removes all hint of being fair. While the X-Difficult levels refrained from using enemies that attacked you and focused on the platforming elements, the Ruin User level hides projectile-shooting enemies in spikes in tiny corridors, requires the player to use techniques usually reserved for Sequence Breaking, and requires pixel-perfect positioning at several points in the level. | |
Platform Hell / int_8a40b4a6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_8a40b4a6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dustforce (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_8a40b4a6 | |
Platform Hell / int_8de7f598 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_8de7f598 | comment |
The official list on the forums has only 509 unique people to clear it, including the creator (who is not anywhere near first on the list). The best-known impossible-clearer created a separate fangame and game engine. | |
Platform Hell / int_8de7f598 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_8de7f598 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
I Wanna Be The Fangame (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_8de7f598 | |
Platform Hell / int_9330ec5d | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_9330ec5d | comment |
Yoshi's Island DS has Nintendo Hard secret levels... with the exception of the last one, Yoshi's Island Easter Eggs. That contains several incredibly frustrating and hard challenges, and doesn't even try to play fair (Ride an Arrow Ball through a room of spikes! Jump on platforms controlled by an enemy! Light switches last for 3 seconds!) | |
Platform Hell / int_9330ec5d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_9330ec5d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Yoshi's Island (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_9330ec5d | |
Platform Hell / int_944eecc3 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_944eecc3 | comment |
While Rockman No Constancy's Normal Mode is much harder than the standard Mega Man game, it's still at least somewhat reasonable. The Hard Mode on the other hand removes Mercy Invincibility, turning an already hard game into pure Hell. Even the weakest enemies turn into massive threats that can single-handedly kill you. | |
Platform Hell / int_944eecc3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_944eecc3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Rockman No Constancy (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_944eecc3 | |
Platform Hell / int_9e2dbb4d | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_9e2dbb4d | comment |
Regular Show: Mordecai and Rigby in 8-Bit Land may be one of the most difficult games ever based on a kids show. 1 hit kills. Relentless enemies. Maze-like level designs. It's I Wanna Be the Guy for kids. | |
Platform Hell / int_9e2dbb4d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_9e2dbb4d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Regular Show | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_9e2dbb4d | |
Platform Hell / int_a2add1d3 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_a2add1d3 | comment |
Splatoon 2: A number of the tests in the Octo Expansion DLC qualify for this, usually of the "fight a large number of enemies while hopping between tiny platforms over a bottomless pit" variety. As a bonus, several of them also require you to move platforms and such by shooting targets while dealing with enemies simultaneously. | |
Platform Hell / int_a2add1d3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_a2add1d3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Splatoon 2 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_a2add1d3 | |
Platform Hell / int_a69c5636 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_a69c5636 | comment |
You Have to Win the Game is as much Platform Hell as the player wants it to be. You can beat it without all that much in the way of suffering, but if you want to go for 100% completion, you're going to have to go through some areas that require every bit as much in the way of precision and timing as the worst of IWBTG's challenges. It doesn't pull IWBTG-style cheap tricks to kill you just for the hell of it — but, then, it doesn't need to. | |
Platform Hell / int_a69c5636 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_a69c5636 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
You Have to Win the Game (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_a69c5636 | |
Platform Hell / int_abd49de7 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_abd49de7 | comment |
Hammer Brother is an example of this trope caused by Fake Difficulty. Ratchet Scrolling makes it easy to get stuck, very long levels without a checkpoint are mandatory, and the Orb Glitch is required to bypass an Unwinnable boss fight. | |
Platform Hell / int_abd49de7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_abd49de7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Hammer Brother (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_abd49de7 | |
Platform Hell / int_b50a2379 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_b50a2379 | comment |
Eryi's Action, a cute but fiendishly hard platformer involving a fairy girl who wants to get back her melon. Places more of an emphasis on puzzle-solving than the pixel-perfect jumps of I Wanna Be the Guy. The manual lampshades this, making many references to player frustration or player-damaged input devices. | |
Platform Hell / int_b50a2379 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_b50a2379 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Eryi's Action (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_b50a2379 | |
Platform Hell / int_b7999241 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_b7999241 | comment |
The Dirty Harry NES game is somewhere between this and Nintendo Hard. While a lot of the difficulty is standard, it also sports a number of cruel glitches, as well as things more in this category. Such as the "Ha Ha Ha" room. An area, impossible to tell from the outside, that once entered, requires you to reset the game, and a one-way maze leading back to the start of the game. Here's another level. There are issues with collision detection, item usage, bad coloring, repetitive music... | |
Platform Hell / int_b7999241 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_b7999241 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dirty Harry (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_b7999241 | |
Platform Hell / int_ba1083f7 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_ba1083f7 | comment |
Guitar Hero custom songs are often this because they are made by/for people who think even "Through the Fire and Flames" was easy. They often contain inhumanly fast sections and awkward patterns among things. Despite his charts actually being accurate to his songs, Exilelord in particular is a repeat offender. Possibly his most infamous song, "Mechanical Machines (Soulless 2)" is so bad that it took almost 8 years for a legit FC. "Soulless 6" takes this straight to Unwinnable Joke Game levels. Rock Band DLC song, "Operation Pound and Ground" is also at this level despite being an official chart. It's freakishly over-charted and over 7 minutes long with multiple runs over 25 notes-per-second and 2 insane solos. It took a long time for an FC of this song. |
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Platform Hell / int_ba1083f7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_ba1083f7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Guitar Hero (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_ba1083f7 | |
Platform Hell / int_bcf04dc4 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_bcf04dc4 | comment |
The PC game The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1984) is notorious for being very close to Adventure Game Hell. Many puzzles are ridiculous and insane, and the room descriptions contain outright lies. Not mistakes, lies. Many other Infocom Interactive Fiction games have even harder puzzles, but this is the only one that uses its difficulty in the same ironic manner as other Platform Hell games. In addition, it's extremely easy to make this game Unwinnable. Didn't pick up the junk mail at the start of the game? Didn't buy the sandwich in the pub? The game won't mind, it won't even hint that those things have any effect when you do them - but if you don't, woe betide you later on. Also, near the end of the game, you will find yourself in need of a certain item. The item is chosen from a list of twelve possibilities, and unless you have all of them, the game will always ask for one you don't have. So, if you're not using a walkthrough, you'll start over and make a point of finding the item you missed, only to get to the end and find that you need a different one. Repeatedly. An example of the game lying: in a certain corridor in the Heart of Gold, if you try and move in a particular direction, you are informed, "You can't go that way." In a typical adventure game, that would be the end of it, but this game expects the player to try to move in that direction repeatedly until the game eventually says, "Fine! Have it your way!" and allows the player to proceed. Douglas Adams said in an interview "This is the first game that moves beyond user friendly. It is user insulting and...user mendacious." Dave Leary's games were notorious for their "lying computer" puzzles as well. Leary did admit to being heavily inspired by Infocom games. |
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Platform Hell / int_bcf04dc4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_bcf04dc4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1984) (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_bcf04dc4 | |
Platform Hell / int_c0a81d9d | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_c0a81d9d | comment |
Tomb of Horrors, the infamous Dungeons & Dragons module and Ur-Example. To just get into said dungeon you have to get past a literal Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies. And that's the easiest part of it; it all goes downhill from there. Have fun, you masochistic players, have fucking fun. | |
Platform Hell / int_c0a81d9d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_c0a81d9d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Tomb of Horrors (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_c0a81d9d | |
Platform Hell / int_c35ec21c | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_c35ec21c | comment |
Super Mario Odyssey's Superstar Mode mod remixes the game to be much harder, to the point where several advanced tricks are needed just to navigate the overworld. The sand in the Sand Kingdom deals damage. The water of the Lake Kingdom is icy, hurting Mario if he stays in it for too long. The lower parts of the Lost Kingdom are constantly bombarded by waves of instant death poison water. All four Broodals are fought at once. Unlike most difficulty mods, the creators have stated that it is possible to get every moon without glitches or taking damage. | |
Platform Hell / int_c35ec21c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_c35ec21c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Super Mario Odyssey (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_c35ec21c | |
Platform Hell / int_c64b67f4 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_c64b67f4 | comment |
Curses is probably the most famous Interactive Fiction game to fit this trope, though there are many others. (Just don't say any actual curse words in-game, no matter how frustrated you get, or you will be punished with a parser that ignores you until you wash your mouth out with the soap that just appeared in your inventory.) | |
Platform Hell / int_c64b67f4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_c64b67f4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Curses (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_c64b67f4 | |
Platform Hell / int_c6e31a96 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_c6e31a96 | comment |
The Angry Video Game Nerd Adventures is a compendium of all of the Nerd's Nintendo Hard pet peeves. The most common frustrating obstacle are the "death blocks", which often periodically appear and disappear or have to be negotiated in jumping puzzles. | |
Platform Hell / int_c6e31a96 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_c6e31a96 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Angry Video Game Nerd Adventures (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_c6e31a96 | |
Platform Hell / int_d1719878 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_d1719878 | comment |
Grand Poo World 3 is one of the greatest of this type, adding custom mechanincs, a randomized tower of rooms and puzzle solving in addition to the challenging gameplay of these types of games. | |
Platform Hell / int_d1719878 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_d1719878 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Grand Poo World 3 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_d1719878 | |
Platform Hell / int_d4f6f3fb | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_d4f6f3fb | comment |
Racing games are not immune to hellish hacks either. F-Zero got its own hellish hack called F-Zero: The Revenge. Land mines, magnets, death traps, long jumps, twisting and knotting tracks, and Marathon Levels galore! | |
Platform Hell / int_d4f6f3fb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_d4f6f3fb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
F-Zero (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_d4f6f3fb | |
Platform Hell / int_d5526eaa | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_d5526eaa | comment |
Limbo is a bit nicer than most of the above examples — you're expected to die early and often, but Death Is a Slap on the Wrist, and dying once is supposed to help you figure out how to not die upon retrying the puzzle. The level designer has talked at length about balancing this. | |
Platform Hell / int_d5526eaa | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_d5526eaa | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Limbo (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_d5526eaa | |
Platform Hell / int_e16fa1a8 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_e16fa1a8 | comment |
The Impossible Quiz - a non-platformer example, only by virtue of the completely ridiculous and hilarious "solutions" that the game expects of the player. A brief sampler of said "solutions": Finding a completely invisible button to click on a white field, choosing an answer in a multiple choice question where the answers have nothing to do with the question, are not in english, or are blank, and right clicking on the window to deactivate the Flash control to keep the program from failing younote This was possibly inspired by the quiz level in Earthworm Jim 2, which was only a Bonus Level but had answers such as 'B. A' and 'C. Come on, I really need this powerup!'. The game does let you skip some questions, but you'll need every skip available to pass the final question. This was quite intentional. |
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Platform Hell / int_e16fa1a8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_e16fa1a8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Impossible Quiz (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_e16fa1a8 | |
Platform Hell / int_e5d5d23c | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_e5d5d23c | comment |
The Doom Game Mod NoYe, made by speedrunners for speedrunners. Most maps in the set are ridiculously difficult. For example, MAP03 forces you to tightrope-walk along a very thin, very long, curving path, all while hundreds of monsters are firing at you from all sides. MAP28 has you up against a horde of over eleven thousand monsters, all in one open area with no cover whatsoever. MAP33 places you on a fast conveyor belt, forcing you to dodge instant-death obstacles with barely any time to react. Amusingly, MAP01 is an inversion — it's literally the easiest level possible: you win instantly upon starting it. | |
Platform Hell / int_e5d5d23c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_e5d5d23c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Doom (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_e5d5d23c | |
Platform Hell / int_e7795776 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_e7795776 | comment |
Celeste is a challenging platformer even at its easiest, and actively encourages players to be proud of how many times they've died because they're learning from their mistakes. But finding and collecting the cassette tapes hidden in each level unlocks their "B-side", which are exponentially harder. These levels demand precision platforming from the player — even the easiest B-sides can kill a seasoned player upwards of sixty times on their first go — and to make matters worse, Chapter 7's B-side throws in an all-new mechanic, the Wall Bounce, which then becomes mandatory to complete the rest of the level. Clear the B-sides, and your reward is the C-sides. Each of them only lasts three or four rooms, but C-sides can prove even more challenging than their B-side counterparts because the last room is always very, very long and must be completed perfectly to finish the level, or else the player will get sent right back to the start of the room. Oh, and the very last C-side introduces another new skill, the Hyperdash. Unlocked along with the C-sides are the Golden Strawberries. Each level has one, including the B-sides, C-sides, and Farewell. To collect a Golden Strawberry, you have to complete the level without dying. Mess up even once, and you'll be taken all the way back to the beginning of the level, no matter how much progress you've already made. In a game as difficult as Celeste, successfully grabbing a Golden is one of the greatest challenges Madeline will ever face. |
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Platform Hell / int_e7795776 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Platform Hell / int_e7795776 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Celeste (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_e7795776 | |
Platform Hell / int_f072c8e3 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_f072c8e3 | comment |
Kaizo Mario World — colloquially known as "Asshole Mario". Quite possibly the Trope Codifier, at least for this tendency in the world of SMW hacking. While Super Mario Forever had only fire bars, blocks and moving platforms, the many traps and devices of Super Mario World make their appearance here. One particularly notable trap occurs in Special World 2. If you don't grab a pound switch right at the end of the level, then after you hit the end gate, Mario gleefully walks along, right off a ledge, and dies. After finishing the level. And what's even worse is that the entire level has to be completed in less than two minutes, so the player is already in a frenzy, trying to get to the end before the timer runs out. Kaizo Mario World 2 goes one step further into Platform Hell within the first few seconds of the game by attempting to kill you in the opening cutscene. |
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Kaizo Mario World (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell | |
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Ninja: Shadow of Darkness: The game begins as a rather standard (if really fun) Beat 'em Up game, but as it progresses, platformer elements starts becoming increasingly common, to the point of becoming painfully tedious. The Cloud City, Beach and Hell levels are notable offenders. | |
Platform Hell / int_f33b3f7b | featureApplicability |
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Ninja: Shadow of Darkness (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell / int_f3cbb86a | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_f3cbb86a | comment |
BoxxyQuest: The Gathering Storm is primarily an RPG, made in an RPG engine, so all of its platforming segments are little bit janky. But the six bonus trials during the epilogue take it to a level of pure absurdity. New mechanics are thrown at you left and right, none of which are explained to you, and sometimes the physics don’t even make sense. (You can’t stand on moving platforms, for instance. They can only be used as stepping stones). Even players dedicated to 100% completion have admitted to giving up in frustration… on the first level. | |
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BoxxyQuest: The Gathering Storm (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_f3cbb86a | |
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Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_f8d1500a | comment |
Takeshi's Challenge, a video game inspired by the impossibly difficult game show "Takeshi's Castle", includes several unfair segments (including a Shoot 'Em Up section in which the player can't move upward without hitting gusts of wind, which are destroyed if shot) and Guide Dang It! puzzles. | |
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Takeshi's Challenge (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_f8d1500a | |
Platform Hell / int_f97683ef | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_f97683ef | comment |
Hollow Knight is, for the most part, not an example of this genre: It's instead a fairly traditional Metroidvania side-scroller that draws some concepts and mechanics from Dark Souls, of all things. This means that the difficulty comes mostly from the combat and not so much from the platforming (save for the occasional tricky challenge here and there). But then you reach the White Palace, a technically optional level (that is, however, mandatory if you want to get the Golden Ending) that dips its toes good and well into hellish territory. Monsters are few and far between, and instead the area consists of long, unforgiving gauntlets of platforming challenges that demand very precise jumping and timing, lest you fall into one of the many, many Bottomless Pits and Spikes of Doom (that also exist elsewhere in the game, but there they are used sparingly). As a small mercy, falling into those returns you to a nearby ledge with one less hit point, but when you run out of hit points (and indeed you will, since the aforementioned lack of monsters deprives you of your main source of life-restoring Soul: killing enemies) you are sent back to a checkpoint bench as usual, but here they are few and far between, meaning you'll be forced to repeat each gauntlet A LOT. The main frustration of this level is just how jarring it's nature is: nowhere else are non-combat sections so long and unforgiving. This level feels more like the late-game of Super Meat Boy than it does the game it's in (comically large circular saw blades included!). And if that's not enough, a later update introduced a new, completely optional area — the appropriately named Path of Pain, located behind a secret, breakable wall in the White Palace. The Path of Pain is more unforgiving than the White Palace by a country mile, requiring almost pixel-perfect timing to clear increasingly cramped passages riddled with even more buzzsaws and thorns than before. To make matters worse, the distance between spots you can land on unharmed is much, much greater, forcing the player to think outside the box: for a few sections, it's mandatory to use the Nail to pogo off of the sawblades themselves, many of which are moving. The very last section, a particularly brutal and lengthy thorn-filled passageway with lots of platforming on sawblades, ends with a Dual Boss battle against a pair of Kingsmoulds, which appear right when the player thinks they've gotten to safety. And what do you get for making it all the way to the end of the area? A very brief cutscene showing the Pale King and a younger Hollow Knight together, and a new addition to the Hunter's Journal. |
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Hollow Knight (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Platform Hell | |
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Mega Man Unlimited's Brutal Bonus Level, Yoku Man's stage, fits this. Not only does it include the iconic disappearing*"yoku" block puzzles of the classic series, but contains several twists deliberately designed to mess with the player—one of the first obvious ones being that the background music contains the iconic sounds of the disappearing blocks. Others include enemies disguised as yoku blocks, yoku spikes, enemies that create Fake Platforms (and some Fake Platforms that simply exist to begin with), a labyrinth section that connects to other rooms within it inconsistently, and finally a boss that will appear to die from being shot, only to attempt to reappear on top of the player (keep an eye on the boss's health meter!). It's also a LONG level. | |
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Mega Man Unlimited (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_f97af04c | |
Platform Hell / int_fdb92d14 | type |
Platform Hell | |
Platform Hell / int_fdb92d14 | comment |
Wesleyan Tetris has random bricks, but otherwise deploys a full Platform Hell arsenal. | |
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Wesleyan Tetris (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Platform Hell / int_fdb92d14 |
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