I’m feeling muses beyond the Persona area and I’m tempted to add them here.
I only have two additional ones in mind and I feel like the only things I’ll have to do are change the URL, the blog icon, and the mini profile banner. I can still keep the theme and stuff, I’d just have to rebrand.
gaijin games randomly releasing a remake of bit.trip runner last month has inspired me to try and play these fuckin games again even though i always get so pissed off at them. i love commandervideo though hes literally my bestie
Hard to believe that it's already been some 13 years since CommanderVideo made a splash on WiiWare with the fourth BIT.TRIP entry, BIT.TRIP RUNNER. A lot has happened since, including the launch of no less than two... wait. No, three sequels, except BIT.TRIP RERUNNER is a remake of the original, complete with a fully functional built-in level editor. Excited yet? Well, you should be!
Davesprite and Terezi Pyrope have a shockingly low Ryu number of 2, due to their appearance in Namco High alongside Pac-Man, and Pac’s appearance in Super Smash Bros for the Wii U/ 3DS. I’m not sure if a interactable poster of the character in the background counts in your rules, but if it does, this means Bubsy the Bobcat has a Ryu Number of 5. Going from the Bubsy poster in Hiveswap, to Zebruh Codakk who is both in Hiveswap and Hiveswap Friendsim(separate games), to “MSPA Reader”(who is a character in and of themselves), the player character both in Friendsim and Pesterquest, to Terezi in Pesterquest and Namco High, to Pac-Man in Smash Bros.
It does not.
Bubsy does not have has a Ryu Number of 2.
(CORRECTION: Per @jakethesequel, Bubsy in Fractured Furry Tales gives him a Ryu Number of 2.)
(bonus below)
At some point, it was a Kickstarter stretch goal to add CommanderVideo from BIT.TRIP as a playable character in Bubsy: Paws on Fire!, which would have given Bubsy a Ryu Number. A stretch goal of...
Hm. Seems a bit ambitious to me, but far be it from me to make any claim about the cost of video game development. Hell, I'd even buy that this is just a fraction of the true development cost and the $75,000 dollars is more of an interest check than anything else.
On that note, how much did that Kickstarter—
Oh.
I mean this completely unironically: you hate to see it.