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James Rolfe is a very entertaining film maker. His biggest claim to fame is obviously the Angry Video Game Nerd. The Nerd basically reviews bad video games, and rips them apart after getting annoyed. He comments on the graphics, gameplay, sound, and sometimes just the overall objective of th...
A Boy and his Blob (NES): Directed by James Rolfe. With James Rolfe. Break out the jellybeans and join the Nerd as he revisits A Boy and His Blob, an enigma of a game that our bespectacled hero finds intriguing, yet frustrating, but can be beaten so long
Doom: Directed by James Rolfe. With James Rolfe, John Romero. While waiting for his copy of Doom (1993) to load on his Commodore 64, the Nerd makes a deal with the Devil to play other console versions of Doom, ranging from good, bad, and downright ugly.
YouTube Wikis Go to these sites for info or for help with your own wiki! The Amazing Marble Race• Angry Grandpa• Angry Video Game Nerd•Animator vs. Animation•Annoying Orange•Aphmau•Asdfmovie•Awkward Puppets•Baby Lamb & Friends•Battle for Dream Island•BB Ki Vines•Brid...
Sega Game Gear VHS Tapes: Directed by James Rolfe. With James Rolfe. Remember the time Howard Johnson and Sega teamed up to try and dissuade kids and adults from playing the Game Gear? If not, the Nerd has uncovered the evidence on an old VHS tape.
Bad Final Fight Games: Regia di James Rolfe. Con James Rolfe, Matt Kowalewski. Final Fight may have been a hit in the arcades, but it's next-gen home console sequels were anything but. The Nerd looks at two Final Fight sequels that were outdated the mome
and they were a huge influence on the early lot of on-video game reviews being one of the first set of people to do it. They somewhat set the stage for the many thousands of others doing them regularly across YouTube and other sites today. There was even an Angry Video Game Nerd ...
Angry Video Games Nerd系列的前身是Angry Nintendo Nerd(在他的主题曲完整版的歌词里也提到过)。从...
Multihyphenate Rolfe plays the titular Angry Video Game Nerd, whose principal mission in life is to record and upload severely critical reviews of mostly obsolete console and computer games. One that he won’t revisit, however, is Atari’s “E.T.,” a release based on the 1982 movie. Wide...