Also unlike most Let's Players, he doesn't actually do much let's plays; when he used to be smaller, he did Kirby, Double Dragon, and Fire Emblem walkthroughs (the latter of which is currently going on in an alternate collab channel between him and SolarKnight99, The Awful Tacticians). He mostly does comedic commentary on common tropes he finds in gaming. He has the following series:
- List of levels covered:
- Fish City (Best #1)
- Mt. Mortar (Worst #1)
- Super Battle Ship (Best #2)
- Creepy Steeple and General White's search (Worst #2 and #3)
- Twisted Metal 2 - Paris (Best #3)
- Quick Man (Worst #4)
- Pure Land (Best #4)
- Mansion of Terror (Worst #5)
- Toejam and Earl - Level 0 (Best #5)
- Diamond Sands (Worst #6)
- Matango Jump (Best #6)
- Kanbei's Error? (Advanced) and Rivals! (Worst #7 and #9)
- Taz Mania Game Gear - Level 1 (Worst #8)
- Shining Force - Battle 2 (Worst #10)
- Infinity (Worst #11)
- Battle Before Dawn (Worst #12)
- Arcadia (Worst #13)
- Skull Woods and Ice Palace (Worst #14 and #15)
- Battletoads in Battlemaniacs - Stage 1 (Best #7)
- Stumblebot (Best #8)
- Zombies Ate My Neighbors - Last password checkpoint (Worst #16)
- "Jake's Trial" from Dual Strike on Hard mode (Worst #17)
- Animal Antics (Best #9)
- Akira's chapter (Worst #18)
- The Pokemon Gym puzzles in Vermillion City and Cinnabar Island (Worst #19)
- The various bonus levels in the Tiny Toons SNES game (Best #10)
- The final level of the NES Ninja Gaiden along with its bosses (Worst #20)
- Turbo Tunnels, Volkmire's Inferno, and Clinger Winger (Worst #21)
- Marble Zone (Worst #22)
- Lady Boyle's Last Party (Best #11)
- Waylon Flies Again (Worst #23, Patreon request)
- Unlocking Katze (Worst #25)
- Rusty Bucket Bay engine room (Worst #24)
- Poochy Ain't Stupid (Worst #26)
- Globe Holder (Weirdest #1)
- Legacy Island (Weirdest #2)
- Worlds A-D (Weirdest #3)
- Stampede Sprint (Weirdest #4)
- The Value of Life (Hector Hard Mode, where every enemy excluding the boss is a Berserker) (Weirdest #5)
- The Foundry (Worst #27)
- Stair Wars/Go Up! (Worst #28)
- Sector Z's Medal Challenge (Worst #29)
- Villi People (Weirdest #6)
- The Special Missions in Metal Gear Solid: VR Missions (Weirdest #7)
- Puyo Box's Quest Mode (Weirdest #8)
- The third Underwater Ruins Stage (Weirdest #9)
- Slimy Spring Galaxy (Best #12)
- The Amiga port of this game (Worst #30) note
- Ambush at Khanos City (Best #13)
- Every level in High-Tech World (Worst #31)
- Wario's Stadium, Rainbow Road, and Mirror Cup Toad's Turnpike (Worst #32)
- Gaulish Village Level 2 (Worst #33)
- Facing Worlds (Best #14) note
- Aegis Cave (Worst #34)
- Island Flyover (Best #15)
- Just about every level in Asterix and the Great Rescue (Worst #35)
- The worst battles in Vandal Hearts (Worst #36)
- The escape from the Second Death Star in Super Return of the Jedi (Worst #37)
- Web Woods (Worst #38)
- The worst levels of the campaign mode of Advance Wars 2 (Worst #39)
- Mario Circuit 2 (Best #16)
- I Miss the Ground 3 (Worst #40)
- Taz Mania (Game Gear) - Every level (Worst #41)
- Ren and Stimpy (SNES) The Boy Who Cried Rat!'s second and fourth section (Worse #42)
- All bosses in Legend of the Mystical Ninja (#1)
- All bosses in Illusion of Gaia (#2)
- Boss shortcuts including (#3)
- Weird bosses including (#4)
- Raymond Sullivan (#5)
- Boobeam Trap (#6)
- Egg Saucer (#7)
- Boss deaths including (#8)
- All bosses in Super Castlevania IV note (#9)
- Easy final bosses including, "hardest" to easiest (#10)
- Dmitrii Blinov (#11)
- All "bosses" in Alex Kidd in the Enchanted Castle (#12)
- More boss shortcuts (#13) including
- Twin Freaks (#14)
- Hard first bosses (#15) including
- Barubary (when you accept his one on one challenge) (#16)
- Even more boss shortcuts (#17) including
- All bosses in Super Bomberman 2 without any powerups (#18)
- Hellish Final Bosses (#19) including
- All bosses in Super Bomberman 3 without any powerups (#20)
- All bosses in Pop n' Twinbee Rainbow Bell Adventures with each character, and without upgrades (#21)
- Elephant bosses in various games (#22) including
- Female final bosses (#23) including
- Jet in Streets of Rage 2 and 3 (#24)
- More weird bosses (#25) including
- Aerodent (S-Hard) (#26)
- So many more boss shortcuts (#27) Including
- Gigantic bosses (#28) Including
- All bosses in Castlevania: Symphony of the Night (#29), except that Alucard is not allowed to equip weapons or armor.
- Cloud N. Candy (#30)
- Boss Role Reversals (#31)
- The Minotaur (#32)
- The Revenge of Shinobi (#33), melee attacks only.
- More easy final bosses (#34) Including
- First bosses with rematches (#35)
- Copy Robot (#36)
- Bosses He Hates (#37) Including
- Awesome boss introductions (#38)
- Every boss from Rod Land (#39)
- Final bosses that return in a later game (#40)
- Spikey Tiger (#41)
- Every Bowser fight from Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (#42)
- Every boss from Goof Troop (#43)
- Even more weird bosses (#44)
- Death Bringer (#45)
- Small bosses (#46)
- Claustrophobia-inducing bosses, featuring Shyguymask (#47)
- Regular enemies that get promoted to bosses (#48)
- Yet more boss shortcuts (#49) note
- Final Bosses with Giant Hands of Doom (#50)
- All bosses in Super Bomberman 4 without any powerups (#51)
- Astarte (#52)
- Arachnid bosses (#53)
- All Bosses in the original Super Bomberman, again, with no powerups. (#54)
- Biomeka (#55)
- His own boss ideas to perfectly balance freedom of choice and Dynamic Difficulty. (#56)
- All bosses in Super Bomberman 5 without any powerups (#57)
- More cool boss deaths (#58)
- Theodore Lagerfeld Jr. (#59)
- Bosses with unusually low amounts of health (#60) Including
- Tails Abuse In Court, where Sonic is taken to court to testify against Robotnik who's been accused of killing Tails (complete with Phoenix Wright as Robotnik's defense attorney). Got a 2-part remake titled The Twin-Tailed Turnabout to celebrate this subseries' 10th anniversary.
- Tails Defense Squad, where he does dramatic readings of comments retaliating against him for making this videos. note
- Sonic Abuse, where he abuses Sonic in Super Smash Bros., since Tails isn't a playable character.
- As a one-video special, he did Lovely Good Endings, with ActRaiser being the first and only one. Another one-video special focuses on Creepy Good Endings, the first being the infamous Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (NES). Another one-video special was based around Crazy Bizarre Endings.
- This is easily his most popular series yet, clocking in at over 90 videos!
- List of games covered:
- Streets of Rage 3 (#1 & 2) note
- Sonic the Hedgehog 2 (Game Gear) (#3)
- The NewZealand Story (#4)
- Chrono Trigger (#5)
- The Revenge of Shinobi (#6)
- Super Metroid (#7) (with a small foray into Metroid Fusion to cover some depressing implications)
- Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War (#8 & 9) note
- Doom, mostly the SNES port. (#10)
- Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3 (April Fools) (#11)
- Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance (#12)
- Breath of Fire II (#13 & 14)
- Wario Land 4 (#15)
- Splatterhouse 3 (#16)
- Clock Tower (#17)
- Castlevania II: Simon's Quest (#18)
- Cannon Fodder (#19)
- Comix Zone (#20)
- Final Fantasy V (#21)
- Prince of Persia (#22)
- Knuckles Chaotix (#23)
- Kirby's Dream Land 3 (#24)
- Dead Rising (#25)
- Dead Rising 2: Case Zero, the actual Dead Rising 2, and Case West (#26, #27, and #28)
- DuckTales (#29)
- Twisted Metal 2 (#30)
- Terra Incognita (A mini-RPG game on the PSX Net Yaroze) (#31)
- The Donkey Kong Country trilogy's Game Over screens and Donkey Kong 64 (#32)
- Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance (Specifically Shang Tsung, Quan Chi, Scorpion, Frost, Reptile and Li Mei's endings) (#33)
- Castlevania: Dracula X & Castlevania: Symphony of the Night (#34)
- Pikmin (#35)
- The bad ending to Case 2-4 of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Justice For All (#36)
- Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (#37)
- Bubble Bobble (#38)
- The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (#39)
- Wario Land 3 (#40)
- Clash at Demonhead (#41)
- Waxworks (1992) (#42)
- Soul Blade (#43)
- Dead Rising 3 (#44)
- Theme Park (#45)
- Live A Live (#46)
- Wizards & Warriors 3 (#47)
- Dead Rising 2: Off The Record (#48)
- Nosferatu (#49)
- Dishonored (#50)
- Dishonored's "Knife of Dunwall" and "Brigmore Witches" DLC (#51)
- Bomberman 64 (#52)
- M. Bison's endings in (the SNES versions of) Street Fighter II, Super Street Fighter II, and Street Fighter Alpha 3, the latter of which also counts Ryu's ending as it functions as M. Bison's bad ending. (#53)
- Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade (#54)
- Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow (#55)
- Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow (#56)
- Rolo to the Rescue (#57)
- Harvest Moon DS (#58)
- Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (#59)
- Banjo-Kazooie (#60)
- Breath of Fire IV (#61)
- Wario Land II (#62)
- Star Fox 1993 (#63, which covers the disturbing implications set by the bonus "Out of this Dimension" level)
- Star Fox 64 (#64)
- Abe's Oddysee, Abe's Exoddus and Munch's Oddysee. (#65)
- Nine Hours, Nine Persons, Nine Doors (#66, as a Patreon request)
- Batman: Arkham City (#67)
- Super Paper Mario (#68)
- Meteos (#69)
- Red Dead Redemption (#70)
- Critical Depth (#71)
- Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards (#72)
- Streets of Rage Remake (#73)
- Game overs where the Player Character becomes an angel (#74)
- Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (#75)
- Puyo Puyo 2 (#76)
- Shenmue (#77)
- Mario Kart 64 (#78)
- Episode 79, focused on Golden Axe, is an important episode, marking the rebrand to Creepy Bad Endings etc., which covers all types of endings, including the ones that were previously part of the specials or smaller series. The official statement is that this is so he can keep all such videos under one series, making it more simple to organize.
- Endings in Double Dragon games (#80)
- The various endings from the Sega CD version of Earthworm Jim (#81)
- The end of Act One in Dragon Quest XI (#82)
- Creepy game over screens (#83)
- Wario Land: Shake It! (#84)
- Conker's Bad Fur Day (#85)
- Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers (#86)
- Capcom vs. SNK 2: Mark of the Millennium (#87)
- Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin (#88)
- Corpse Party (#89)
- E-102 Gamma's scenario in Sonic Adventure (#90)
- Dragon Quest (#91)
- Castlevania: Order of Ecclesia (#92)
- Reventure (#93)
- ZombiU (#94)
- Pilotwings (#95)
- More creepy game over screens (#96)
- ToeJam and Earl in Panic on Funkotron (#97)
- Beavis and Butt-Head (Specifically, the Mega Drive version) (#98)
- Virtue's Last Reward (#99-100)
- His top ten creepiest bad endings covered so far (#101)
- Sonic the Hedgehog (Drowning) (#1)
- Pokémon Mystery Dungeon (Being blown out of the dungeon by the mysterious force) (#2)
- Final Fantasy VI (Fighting Vargas, the opera scene, escaping from the Floating Continent, the collapsing house) (#3)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong (Hurry Up Theme) (#4)
- Die Hard Trilogy (Bomb Timer) (#5)
- Vandal Hearts (Train cars would get released every few turns in a certain Traintop Battle) (#6)
- Banjo-Kazooie (King Sandybutt's spike trap timer) (#7)
- Wario Land 4 (Frog Switch Timer) (#8)
- Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker (Peace Walker's Nuke timer) (#9)
- Live A Live (The Sundown Kid's scenario) (#10)
- Final Fantasy V (The escape from Karnak Castle, the fight against Odin, the Forks Tower, and the Sunken Walse Tower) (#11)
- Pikmin 2 (The Submerged Castle) (#12)
- Every Catastrophic Countdown in the 2D Metroid Games (#13)
- Characters he's considered the weakest:
- Alex Kidd
- Dizzy
- Prince Duncan
- Bubsy
- Jogurt the Hamster
- Toad Man
- The Spelunker
- Peepers from the World of Ruin.
- The protagonist of the Zork series
- Bob the Goldfish
- Wanderin' Gooms
- Great Devil
- Liberty City's ambulances.
- Gareth (with Sophia from Binding Blade getting a dishonourable mention) (Ironically, Gareth could be good… if he wasn't a Stone Wall with low resistance at a point where there are no enemies that use physical attacks left in the game, with the only exception being a skill the final boss uses.)
- Tofu Boy
- Dirk the Daring in the NES version of Dragon's Lair.
- Jonathan Dark in The Duel mission
- Various weak attacks in gaming.
- The weakest Pokémon in terms of stats
- The Prince
- Cosmic Spacehead
- List of characters he's considered the strongest:
- The 16-bit Block from Gokujo Parodius
- Gen I Mewtwo, from back when the "Special Attack" and "Special Defense" stats were one stat.
- The Brachiosaur
- A glitched, undead Han Solo from the Master System version of A New Hope
- Arvis and Julia
- The secret units from Age of Empires II
- Doctor Wily in the Wily Capsule 7 from Mega Man 7.
- The Brachioraidos
- The Lost Woods thief from The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
- Kecleon in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon
- Alec Trevelyan and Baron Samedi
- Ash Lambert in Vandalier Class
- Wheelie Rider Kirby and his Player 2 star shot attack
- The Ultimate Chimera
- Deghinsea
- Conquest-verse Arceus
- Steve in his guest appearance in Super Meat Boy
- Manfred von Karma (Not in terms of strength, but in terms of presence, intimidation, preparedness, and sheer persistence.)
- Various powerful attacks in gaming.
- Morgan Freeman (South Park: The Fractured but Whole)
- The Super/Hyper Transformations (Actually, Cream the Rabbit)
- A powerful entity stronger than even the Cyberdemon: Terrycrewsdemon. An April Fools joke.
- N'Doul and Pet Shop
- Galamoth
- Final bosses in the Advance Wars series.
- The T.A.C. helper
- Skyward Sword Link, for his ability to heal while sitting on a chair.
- Enemies with high evasion stats.
- Carbuncle in Puyo Puyo Fever's Very Hard difficulty
- Emerl
- Sephiroth
- Domingo, Bleu and Musashi
- Various powerful items in games.
- The Sharkator
- The Forgotten One
- More various powerful attacks in games.
- Charmy Bee
- Ned Flanders
- More powerful attacks in various games.
- List of covered moments:
- Running from a T-Rex in the SNES version of Jurassic Park (#1)
- Final Fantasy VI World of Ruin (#2)
- Fighting mummies (#3)
- Incan Gold Ship, Natives Village, Jackal (#4)
- Cube's chapter (#5)
- Lavender Tower, Nascour's lack of battle theme, the Old Chateau, and Groudon's crisis (#6)
- Barose from Breath of Fire 2 (#7)
- The surprising amount of blood and violent imagery in the console ports of Lemmings (#8)
- Buying Golden Lumber in Harvest Moon: More Friends of Mineral Town (#9)
- Secret of Mana's Early Game Hell and main villain Thanatos. (#10)
- The Nasty Gatekeeper fight in Dynamite Headdy (#11)
- Various moments in Fire Emblem games (#12)
- Scary music in Game Boy games (#13)
- Giga Bowser (#14)
- Destroyed Sammer's Kingdom and the Underwhere (#15)
- Undead Nightmare (#16)
- Inputting forbidden cheats in Banjo-Kazooie (#17)
- The SA-X (#18)
- The blood-filled house in South Park: The Fractured but Whole (#19)
- Various moments in Super Mario Bros. 3 (#20)
- The anti-piracy screen in Puggsy (#21)
- Various creepy bug enemies in video games (#22)
- Your character morphing into Rinale via hackers in Phantasy Star Online. (#23)
- Pretty much everything about Alundra. (#24)
- Ghastly Video Game Glitches
- Random Acts of Spite
- Game Genie Fun
- Leave My Eyes/Ears Alone!
- Leave My Mind Alone!
- Don't Leave My Ears Alone!
Before he focused exclusively on video games, he used to do Crap Cartoons, a series of cartoons made in Windows Movie Maker. This, unfortunately, got drowned out by his more popular videos, and is rarely updated anymore. He made 48, including an anniversary. A side character called Lub Lub was introduced there, and is now The Stinger of his videos.
His videos contain examples of the following:
- Ambiguous Gender:
- Lub Lub's gender was never truly revealed; it's unknown whether it's male, female, both, or neither.
- Parodied upon himself, as he will occasionally refer to himself with feminine titles to screw with his audience.
- Art Evolution: His early videos were made using the same program used for Crap Cartoons — Windows Movie Maker. Later, he started to use Sony Vegas for his videos.
- On a minor note, his new avatar looks much better than the one used in Crap Cartoons.
- Brick Joke:
- His Creepy Bad Endings video on Final Fantasy V has him compare Exdeath's final form to something out of Waxworks (1992)... and promptly reacts to the very boxart of that game with revulsion. Later on, he ended up doing a Creepy Bad Endings video... on Waxworks. Of course, he doesn't actually call back to this brief mention, but otherwise...
- In Crazy Bizarre Endings, The Stinger shows the Zero Wing easy ending on a screen, upon which Mr. X appears in his chair and breaks the wine glass, obviously referencing Streets of Rage 3 being the first game to be covered on Creepy Bad Endings.
- Butt-Monkey: Tails. His role in the Tails Abuse videos is to get all sorts of injury.
- The Chew Toy: Tails again.
- Downer Ending: "Creepy Bad Endings" focus on this (with the occasional Bittersweet Ending).
- Five Stages of Grief: Played for laughs in the "Tails is dead in Sonic 3" theory video, with Git claiming that the first five zones in Sonic 3 are symbolic of these stages.
- From Nobody to Nightmare: In Boss Analysis #56, he imagines what Whispy Woods would look like if he were a Final Boss in a hypothetical Mega Man 2-inspired game Kirby game where Dark Matter returned. Compare his interpretation◊ (provided by one of his fanart drawers) to the original.◊
- Game-Breaking Bug: "Ghastly Game Glitches" is all about this as well as some Good Bad Bugs.
- Lampshade Hanging: He has mentioned some of the tropes by name, like Hoist by His Own Petard and Big Bad.
- Noodle Incident: Boss Analysis #8 (Amazing Boss Deaths) brings us this line: Me and elevators always had our differences in video games (don't ask)
- Out-of-Character Moment: Considers Ending D of Dead Rising 3 to be this. Nick Ramos is a guy who would still stick his neck out for his friends even if he's a bit of a Cowardly Lion, and having the player turn him into a spineless coward who steals the group's escape plane to escape Los Perdidos by himself is decidedly OOC, which he takes into account. The game thus punishes the player by having Nick's friends show up, berate him for his sudden new-found cowardice, and leave him to die. Including Red.
- Poe's Law: His “Tails is dead in Sonic 3” theory video is a parody of Game Theory. Going by the comments however, a lot of people seemed to take the whole thing as a serious attempt at a fan theory.
- Precision F-Strike: He generally doesn't swear very often, and he almost never does it for shock value. When he does, it's usually a sign that he's either very confused, or royally pissed off.
- Running Gag: Top Banana gets referenced very often in the Leave my Eyes Alone! series, due to it being one of the first games reviewed in that series, as well as its memetically eyestrain-inducing graphics.
- Self-Imposed Challenge: Invoked. Some of his one-shot videos tend to be this; for example, his Bidoof Only run of Pokémon Platinum.
- He prefers to beat bosses without using optional weaknesses.
- Boss Analysis #9 has him go through all of the bosses in Super Castlevania IV, with all the actions mapped to one button. Amusingly, some of the easiest bosses became the hardest, and vice versa. Not only that, but he also shows off No Damage Runs on certain bosses he was able to achieve them on.
- Boss Analysis #18, #20, #51, #54 and #57 has him play Super Bomberman 2, 3, 4, 1 and 5 respectively, facing off with the bosses with no powerups in effect, meaning he could only place one bomb at a time, and it has an explosion that is only one block (two blocks in 3, 4 and 5) of length. He does this successfully with 3, 4 and 5, only failing 1 and 2 because the final boss in both games require a power up to beat them.
- Shout-Out: Lub Lub's name is an onomatopoeia for a sound effect in Age of Empires II, which was played when certain units were spawned or selected. In the Lub Lub intros, this sound effect is played when Lub Lub appears.
- Soundtrack Dissonance: Has a bit to say on Castlevania: Dracula X/Vampire's Kiss using the triumphant remix of "Bloodlines" during the credits even when it has endings where Richter didn't save Annette or Maria.
- The Stinger: All of his videos include a random, nonsensical fact about "Lub Lub", his Author Avatar, at the end, accompanied by the "unit created" sound from Age of Empires II.
- The Unreveal: As part of April Fools. Assuming he isn't actually Goofy, Kermit the Frog, or KT from Top Banana.
- That One Level: The point of his "Worst Levels Ever" series.
- Video Game Cruelty Potential: He demonstrates Frank and Chuck's NPC invincibility in Case West and Dead Rising 3 by attacking them without hesitation.
- Wham Shot: The end of "Worst Levels Ever #40" reveals that the awful Platform Hell Super Mario Maker 2 level he was complaining about was created by Lub Lub.