The narrator reviews several WWF (World Wrestling Federation) games for the NES and SNES consoles. They start by playing Tag Team Wrestling and WWF WrestleMania, both of which they find to be poorly made and unenjoyable. They then move on to WWF WrestleMania Challenge, WWF Steel Cage Challenge, and WWF King of the Ring, all of which were developed by LJN and received negative reviews. The narrator expresses frustration with the poor gameplay and lack of coherence in these games.
However, they find some relief in WWF WrestleMania: The Arcade Game, developed by Midway, which they consider to be a decent game despite its limitations. They also play WCW Super Brawl, which they criticize for its poor graphics and gameplay.
Finally, they play Saturday Night Slam Masters, developed by Capcom, which they praise for its simple and intuitive controls, high-flying action, and features like mayor Mike Haggar from Final Fight as a playable character. The narrator concludes that Capcom should have developed more WWF games instead of LJN, which they consider to be one of the worst video game companies.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. Tag-team wrestling was a game on the NES released the same year as Pro Wrestling.
2. Tag-team wrestling had no character selection and players controlled a long-haired guy with a stubby arm.
3. The A button was used for punching, while the B button had no apparent function.
4. WWF WrestleMania was the first licensed WWF game for the NES.
5. WWF WrestleMania had two game modes: standard and tournament.
6. Standard mode featured single one-on-one matches, while tournament mode was an arcade ladder mode.
7. Players could choose a wrestler and an opponent in tournament mode.
8. Players could collect power-ups specific to their wrestler in WWF WrestleMania.
9. WWF WrestleMania Challenge was released for the NES and featured an isometric view.
10. WWF Steel Cage Challenge was released for the NES and featured a steel cage mode.
11. WWF King of the Ring was released for the NES and allowed players to beat opponents by repeatedly kicking and pinning them.
12. WWF games were released for the Super Nintendo, including Super WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, and Raw.
13. WWF WrestleMania: The Arcade Game was released for the Super Nintendo and featured digitized graphics.
14. The game was developed by Midway Games and featured a roster of six wrestlers.
15. The game had a weak roster, but the Genesis version added more characters.
16. WCW Super Brawl was released for the Super Nintendo and featured a different roster and gameplay.
17. The game was developed by Capcom and featured simple controls and high-flying action.
18. WCW Super Brawl featured mayor Mike Haggar from Final Fight as a playable character.