@ragyattha Spoiler opinion.
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Since both of their selves do not exist at the same time, my thought is that the real life versions put on the headset, get scanned, nothing happens, so then they take them off and go about their lives.
This was possibly the weirdest theatre experience I've ever had.
It was a good 90% capacity, and was dead silent for most of the runtime. Not in the general theater etiquette way, in the way that it legit felt like the GoT finale table read.
@HeyLookItsSkkra@corememunlocked It's such a fun game, but the controls need to be well maintained because in later levels, you need that precision. Keep chasing the score!
Anywho, now I'm working for that R*Type score. I've gotten REALLY close.
This movie has some of the best sets ever made. The entire movie feels like a dream. Admittedly, the 3rd act always loses me and I tend to get sleepy, but it's a wild ride. Great cast, too!
@Jebailey@TakiUdon_ Have you been able to get the CDI or Amiga cores to work through composite out? Mine is in black and white with v-sync issues. For Amiga, I did add the .ini lines.
I was actively trying to keep my Hi-Score at @barcadefishtown, but someone else was a master and eventually surpassed me. Fantastic game to do a 1 credit challenge on. I can make it past the lava stage.
I'm glad this special came out, and I was really excited for it! By this time, Tiny Toons was being surpassed by Animaniacs, and I knew this might be the last hurrah. It sucks that Charles Adler was booted, and the pacing is weird to me. I lost it at the Dinty Moore joke, lol!
31 years ago today, on May 28, 1995, the last original episode of Tiny Toon Adventures hit Fox Kids and closed the book on one of the greatest '90s cartoon eras.
Man, that one stings in the best way. I was right there in the living room, probably with a bowl of Cap'n Crunch Peanut Butter Crunch cereal glued to the screen for "Tiny Toons' Night Ghoulery" — that hour-long Halloween blowout packed with parodies of classic horror flicks. Buster, Babs, Plucky, Hamton, Elmyra, and the whole Acme Looniversity crew going full spooky mode? Perfection. It felt like the Looney Tunes spirit got a fresh, edgy '90s upgrade thanks to Steven Spielberg and the Warner Bros. animation dream team.
Think about it: These weren't just random toons — they were the next generation of legends learning (and totally failing) at cartoon school. The slapstick was next-level, the pop culture riffs were sharp, and the animation popped off the screen. Saturday mornings (and weekday afternoons) just hit different when *Tiny Toons* was on. "They're tiny, they're toony, they're all a little loony..." That theme song still lives rent-free in my head.
Who else remembers racing home from school, flipping on Fox Kids, and losing yourself in Acme Acres? The shorts, the movie *How I Spent My Vacation*, the merch... it was pure childhood gold. Even as an '80s kid who grew up on the originals, Tiny Toons bridged that gap perfectly into the '90s.
Today I'm raising a chocolatey frozen caffeine bomb to Buster Bunny and the gang. Thanks for the laughs, the lessons in cartoon physics, and all the nostalgia fuel.
What’s your favorite Tiny Toon memory or episode? Drop it below — let’s flood the timeline with '90s vibes! 🐰📺🍕🎃 #TinyToonAdventures #90sKids #RetroNostalgia #FoxKids #NightGhoulery
@PixelCNinja 7. Iconic cover, but to me, it always looked like some fan art that made its way onto an official product. I think Link is what really drives that home. Looks like a drawing from #LegendaryFrog.
Like the Muppet Babies, sadly we might never get official releases of the Chipmunks 80s series due to all of the copyrights. Whatever exists online are usually low quality VHS recordings.
This live action ➕ 2D animation crossover from "Rockin' Through the Decades" features Alvin of Alvin and the Chipmunks, rotoscoped right into two of Michael Jackson’s most iconic short films for “Smooth Criminal” and “Beat It.”
This first aired as a TV special hosted by
Will Smith as the Fresh Prince in 1992.
Bambi Meets Godzilla (1969) was a student short created by Marv Newland.
Despite lasting barely two minutes, it was later ranked 38th in the book “The 50 Greatest Cartoons.”
The closest I got was the Defiant. I still have the video of me getting it Christmas morning. I have no idea where it ended up, because it was no where to be found when I hit my teens.
Bambi Meets Godzilla (1969) was a student short created by Marv Newland.
Despite lasting barely two minutes, it was later ranked 38th in the book “The 50 Greatest Cartoons.”
Played it at the Freehold Mall in NJ when it came out. Man, it was cray seeing it for the first time. The same arcade had Space Ace, too. What sucked was it cost $1 a try. I didn't get far on either. Anywho, they have Time Traveler at Barcade in Chelsea.