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5 of Our Favorite Horrible TV-to-Video Game Adaptations

VIP.jpg Successful TV franchises have a long, chilling history of birthing video games. Unlike the classic RPGs and fighting games that take years to conceptualize, plan, and produce, TV-inspired video games are often rushed, leading to patchy animation, ungodly graphics, and really repetitive and/or awkward gameplay. In commemoration of the new video game version of Deadliest Catch (or as I call it: Harder Fishin’) we explore five of our favorite misfit adaptations.



americanidolPS2.jpg American Idol
Before these fancy Karoake Revolution Presents: American Idol games came out, Randy Jackson zealots were forced to play along with Idol by jamming buttons to the beat of hit songs to earn judges’ praise. If you liked “Livin’ La Vida Loca” before, you’ll appreciate its subtle artistry after you stamp out “Her skin’s the color of mocha” with your bruised thumbs. Look how ebullient Randy, Paula, and Simon are on the cover! They look like they stepped out of another game completely, like, perhaps, Anticipation.



homeimprovementSNES.JPG Home Improvement
Would you fight mummies on behalf of Binford Tools? I’m on the fence. In 1994, at the height of Home Improvement’s ratings, Absolute Entertainment released a Super Nintendo iteration of the Tim Allen series where Tim “The Tool Man” Taylor fought mummies, dinosaurs, and robots in order to recover supplies taken from the set of Tool Time. The game famously did not include an instruction manual, instead opting to present its players with a flash screen that said, “Real men don’t need instructions.” I didn’t play far enough to find out if the final boss was the terrifying, medieval gawk of Patricia Richardson.

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Comments

If these were iPhone apps, I would thank you for the heads up.

Wait a minute, both Gameboy Color and Advance versions of VIP? That shouldn't count, if one was bad then they both would be. Just stick with one.

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By the Numbers: weekend takes every Monday
Shutter Island Paramount
$22.67M
$75.54M
Cop Out Warner
$18.21M
$18.21M
Crazies Overture
$16.07M
$16.07M
Avatar Fox
$13.66M
$706.56M
Percy Jackson Fox
$9.58M
$71.00M
Valentine's Day Warner
$9.06M
$99.92M
Dear John Sony
$4.81M
$72.43M
Wolfman Universal
$4.26M
$57.38M
Tooth Fairy Fox
$3.43M
$53.84M
Crazy Heart Searchlight
$2.46M
$25.01M
Data courtesy of Rentrak