Hello, and welcome to Bunnyhop! My name is George Weidman, and...
— George Weidman
Super Bunnyhop is a YouTube Analysis Channel about video games created and hosted by George Weidman. The channel has various shows about games, including:
- Opinion/Editorial: This series features videos that are about various game-related topics, whether they be a current event in the gaming community, a game genre he's discovered, a type of game mechanic that bugs him, and more.
- Critical Close-Up: A series of big video essays on a game or game series, dissecting into them about what makes them either work or not work.
- Reviews/Retro Reviews: These are standard reviews of games including old, new, and indie games.
You can find his channel here.
This web series provides examples of:
- Ancient Astronauts: The theme for the sponsorship segment for his review of the Hitman "World of Assassination" trilogy, parodying the likes of Ancient Aliens. Since his sponsor is a sex toy shop, he has a lot of fun framing them as some sort of advanced ancient civilization. He's credited as "Dr. Aliens, Ancient Asstronaut Enthusiast", the questions floating about the "intro" segment are absolutely laced with Double Entendre, and the "mysterious artifacts" on display are quite clearly depictions of sex and/or genitalia.
- Artistic License – History: Discussed in a video about the historical setting of the Soul Series.
- Camp: His Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater Analysis discusses how the game is a masterpiece of intentional camp and points out how its weirdest parts help make the contrasting quiet or dramatic moments hit far harder as a result.
- Early-Installment Weirdness: His early videos had a quicker pace, and a sense of humor and style of review more in line with Mr. Plinkett's reviews. He also had a co-host named Nathan, who left the channel for unknown reasons.
- Enjoy the Story, Skip the Game: He's argued this about both Metal Gear Solid and Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty (among other games).
- Environmental Narrative Game: He has created several videos about the genre, including his review of Gone Home and his interview with its lead designer, Steve Gaynor.
- Fission Mailed: His analysis video of Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty includes a non-videogame example in the form of a false "More Videos" screen, as homage to the game's own version of this trope.
- In the Style of: His Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie review is done in the style of Half in the Bag.
- It's Short, So It Sucks!: Discussed in "Let's Talk about Game Length", which also briefly mentions the inverse, Ending Fatigue. He argues a game being short isn't necessarily a bad thing, so long as it offers a lot of replay value, is tightly paced, and/or experiments with something that might overstay its welcome in a longer game, pointing to Bayonetta, Portal, and Apotheon as examples of each. This segues into his point about The Order: 1886, where he criticizes the game for not fulfilling any of those three.
- Mind Screw: His extremely in-depth review of Metal Gear Solid 2 got into just HOW trippy the whole thing is.
- Mondegreen Gag: As part of a pastiche of The Stanley Parable and its obliteration of the fourth wall, George restarts the intro several times attempting to describe the game, and at one point ends up talking about "The Stan Lee Parable" while showing an old episode of the Lee-hosted documentary series The Comic Book Greats.
- Novelization: Has two videos discussing book adaptations of video games. They tend to fall over the place from the entertaining camp of the Doom novels to the near copy-paste job of Metal Gear Solid.
- Once Original, Now Common: In-universe, in his discussion of Alien: Isolation, he noted that the game might seem a bit stale and played-out to modern gamers due to the titanic influence the Alien franchise holds over video games as a medium.
- Recycled IN SPACE!:
- He refers to Civilization: Beyond Earth as "Civ 5 in space".
- He also refers to Policenauts as "Lethal Weapon in space."
- Rhymes on a Dime:
- When George released a video stating his grievances with The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild on World Poetry Day, he narrated the entire thing in couplet rhyme.
- Volume 4 of "Games From my Inbox" videos starts with an entire paragraph worth of rhyming sentences.
- Running Gag: George often uses a short, out-of-context clip of a Japanese ramen shop's moving decor showing a pair of bobbing chopsticks with a bunch of ramen when referencing the numerous weird things he experienced in Japan.
- Shout-Out: His logo is a modified version of the FOXHOUND logo from Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake.
- Show, Don't Tell: A point of discussion in the "Anti-War War Games" video. He argues that games are better off using mechanics rather than narrative to communicate their message, as it plays to the medium's strengths, comparing and contrasting the white phosphorus scene in Spec Ops: The Line and the old couple's house in This War of Mine to demonstrate his point.
- Sophomore Slump: Discussed Trope. This sums up his feelings on The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings.
- Spiritual Licensee: Discussed Trope. In his review of Hitman (2016), he claims that the latter is the best James Bond game ever made, given its glamorous atmosphere and focus on "social stealth" as opposed to most official Bond games which are either poorly implemented stealth games or generic first person shooters.
- He also claims Dark Souls, with its themes of death and inevitability and its convoluted sense of time, is a successor to The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask.
- Take That!:
- His Critical Close-Up of Dark Souls has one towards controversial Let's Player DarkSydePhil.
George: It's a system that is carefully balanced to allow ANYONE to beat the game. (Shows clip of DSP's Dark Souls Let's Play.) And I do mean anyone.- He takes another jab at DSP in his critical close-up of Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, as an example of low-level gameplay.
- This Is Reality: Gwent in real life falls short because of this; The various ways cards interact, how combat values are counted, and how decks have to be sorted all become much more daunting when the game isn't doing it all for you.
- Values Dissonance: Discussed Trope. "Age Ratings Across The World" focuses on how ratings boards across the world prioritize subject matter such as sex and violence in their decisions differently. For particular examples, games in Russia can be rated higher due to featuring homosexual characters or themes in a non-negative light, while the Sims can be rated higher in Brazil due to themes involving Conspicuous Consumption.
- War Is Hell: The subject of his Anti-War War Games video, which analyzes how various video games such as Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater and ARMA execute this trope and how well they do it.
- You Say Tomato: "nucular" "comparishun" and "chayf" grenades are probably his most controversial pronunciations, but there are a number of words he pronounces weirdly, to the point that some commenters think he started doing it on purpose to annoy the complainers.