Captain n the game master tetris
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Wily come back to the good side, but actually, Dr. Wily was planning to steal Gamma and use it for evil purposes. Mega Man and Kevin go to Topland, a location in Megaland, to take the energy tank necessary for Gamma to work.
All characters from the cartoon are different from the original. Mega Man characters live in Megaland, a part of Videoland. Here are the Mega Man characters differences from the originals:. In the cartoon, Mega Man is portrayed as a short, big-headed, cyan robot later changed to green, resembling Quint's color scheme with a strange robotic voice.
His " Mega Buster " is a small wrist gun concealed in his arm that is wielded in a similar way to Spider-Man's web shooter. A slot can open in his wrist to reveal an energy meter much like the ones in the games, though for some reason Mega Man and all his friends share the same meter.
Notably, he also has a tendency to add the word "Mega" to certain terms to add emphasis. He also has a voice that, according to well-known internet reviewer The Nostalgia Critic, sounds "like Popeye if he smoked an entire Marlboro factory! Wright is an old dwarfed scientist with a big nose and less hair than the original.
Wily looks like the original, but dwarfed and with a deformed head. He works for Mother Brain in this cartoon, and debuts in the episode "How's Bayou". Mega Girl is a female version of Mega Man. She was created by Dr. Wright, and first appeared in the episode Happy Birthday, Mega Man.
Though she made no more full appearances, she is briefly seen dancing with Mega Man in the Season Two episode "Having a Ball". She is believed to be the series' version of Roll , which is a heavy contradiction, since Roll was never converted for combat like Mega Man was, and Roll and Mega Man consider each other siblings in the games.
Rush looks similar to the appearance he has in the games, except that he is brown and orange instead of red and pink. He can actually speak in this, done so by simply opening his mouth and "speaking" in a harsh, robotic monotone.
He was created by Dr. He was built to trash the evil Robot Masters, but instead just trashed the doctor's lab. Cut Man bears little resemblance to his game counterpart. Instead, he is a green and orange robot with lighter green gloves, a thin purple human face, and a pair of golden-colored barber scissors in place of his trademark cutters, which he fires off his head rather than throwing them like a boomerang.
He is also referred to as "Cuts Man". On a side note, out of all the Mega Man 1 bosses in the Captain N Cartoon, Cut Man is the only robot master with any spoken dialogue, mostly notably: "Cuts Man's the name, cutting's my game, and I don't mean hair! Guts Man , compared to his game counterpart, has a smaller lower jaw, what appears to be a navel, and a different color scheme.
The Captain N version of Ice Man is quite similar to his game counterpart. There are a few differences: Ice Man has light blue skin, a cuboid-shaped body, a somewhat robotic face with strange purple markings and eyebrows, and he uses an gun that shoots freezing rays, instead of firing Ice Slashers from his mouth like in the original game.
He was mentioned but not seen in the episode "Nightmare on Mother Brain's Street", where Mega Man's worst nightmare is being frozen solid by him. Other than the predominantly green color change and a more rectangular body as opposed to the more spherical design of the original , this depiction of Bomb Man is very similar to the game version.
Fire Man bears some slight resemblance to the original, but only really in his flaming head and lack of hands. Otherwise, he is completely different, with a metallic silver face, a thicker build, and red and orange body panels with silver and green tubing underneath as opposed to the silver helmet, red armor plating, and grey jumpsuit of the original.
Elec Man bears much resemblance to a human wearing a black and purple costume. He also wears stereotypical teacher glasses that have a solid gold color. Metal Man is silver and both his hands are turned into Metal Blade blasters. He poses a resemblance to an electric can opener, and the only resemblance to his in-game counterpart is the saw blade on his forehead. Quick Man is blue and red and has a strange green mask, as well as a green waistband.
Wood Man looks the closest to his game counterpart, his face is gopher like, his feet look like the heads of bears and instead of using his Leaf Shield , he has a wooden shield and and arm cannon that shoots out a vine.
Air Man is white and has two fan blasters for arms, rather than having a single fan blaster for one arm and instead of a propeller on his chest he has a red triangle with a whirlwind picture on it. Crash Man bears no resemblance to his game counterpart. Instead has lighting bolts on his ears, a lightning bolt on his chest, and has a scoop-like blaster that fires Acme bombs. Bubble Man is blue and round, with a white head, and orange strip around his neck, and water tanks on his head and arm cannon.
He looks more like Aqua Man from Mega Man 8. Heat Man has an orange face a white glove on his left and and an arm cannon on his right, his body retains the "Zippo Lighter" design but is instead red with a pink streak. The first season also featured a number of licensed songs that tied in somehow with the theme of the episode. Each commercial break would be accompanied by a piece of unique art and the theme song of the game primarily being featured in that episode.
As the show was an elaborate commercial for Nintendo and its products, the various worlds within Videoland were based on different Nintendo games released by that time. Super Show , which aired around the same time. Captain N did make reference to the Mario games through the use of the Ultimate Warp Zone that transported him to Videoland in the first place, and the series shared many sound effects and background music with The Super Show.
In , Nintendo had debuted its portable gaming system, Game Boy. To promote the system, a new character was introduced in the second season of Captain N called Gameboy Frank Welker. He was a human-sized version of the device that was sent through a portal by King Charles to aid the N-Team.
DiC producer Ken Ito had tasked Barlow who had been laid off from the company before the first season was produced with designing the character. Behind the scenes, Michael Tavera took over scoring duties from Saban and Levy, licensed songs were no longer being used, and animation duties fell to Spectrum Animation Studio.
The series used a shorter version of the intro with narration provided by Terzo for the season. A single Captain N episode was sandwiched between two Mario Bros. By , the impressive ratings for Saved by the Bell had prompted NBC to consider moving away from cartoons and focusing more on teen-oriented live-action programming.
Mega Man and Belmont had reduced roles in order to avoid paying the royalties to their respective owners, Capcom and Konami. A new intro was made with narration by Hill as Kevin, and episodes went beyond videogames to include parodies of fairy tales. The Family Channel aired time-compressed versions of the songs for the season, reducing each episode by 2 minutes but maintaining the original licensed music. The network edited scenes out of various episodes in order to format it to fit their specified running time.
The episode only aired once and was later replaced by an updated version with improved animation, additional scenes, and music and dialogue swaps. Upon its original airing, everything was left intact. After the first season, Valiant Comics entered into a publishing deal with Nintendo and DiC to produce a series of comics based on the show. However, the book had some notable differences from the actual program.
For starters, Valiant chose not to pay the licensing fees for Belmont and Mega Man and replaced them with Metroid protagonist Samus Aran , who never appeared on the show despite all the other Metroid elements present. Lana also gained a new weapon: a scepter she had in concept art but was only seen briefly once in an episode. The writing also took a decidedly more serious tone than the cartoon. In , the complete series was released to DVD by Shout! The set contained only the first two seasons as the third was considered part of a separate show for legal reasons.
Plans to include a booklet with the set and a scan of the first issue of the Captain N comic were scrapped due to time constraints and rights confusion, however the original Nintendo Power story was included as a bonus feature. Chalk would also reprise his role as Robot Master Guts Man amongst several other roles , and Terzo would also supply voices for an episode.
Season Games: Donkey Kong , Metroid. Game: The Adventures of Bayou Billy. Wily builds a robot version of the kid who used to bully Kevin and lures the heroes into a trap in Castlevania.
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