So there you go, hopefully that’s some good LP fodder for ya! I’ve actually toyed with the idea of doing LPs from time to time, although at this point I think if I ever do one it’d just be a straight playthrough of Japanese and English games for reference – having full playthroughs of Japanese and English games that I often reference would be really useful to me, what with all the Pokemon and Paper Mario series questions I get □ Not that it matters too much, but just for reference Geno uses the Japanese pronoun “ boku”, which is usually used by males.It might be that the localization programmers just decided to insert a basic ASCII character set (which sometimes includes a heart and a music note), and later on during the translation phase, Ted Woolsey was like, “Okay, we need some crazy characters here, what’s available?” and went with what was available. The crazy symbols are different, although I’m not really sure why.The English version includes the speaker name as “?”, but this isn’t in the original.In the Japanese version, Geno refers to the name as being part of the “Star Language” or “Star-ese” or or “Starish” or “Starinian” or whatever you’d prefer to call the language.The key differences and things of interest I can see here are: ?: I’m “♥♪!?”, but it’s hard to pronounce, so… My name is “(CRAZY CHARACTERS)”, but this Star Language is hard to pronounce, so…. This is a pretty simple line – here’s the text side-by-side: Japanese Version (basic translation) Jack kindly included screenshots of the line in question: In short, please compare these two screenshots. I am starting up an LP of SMRPG on Youtube and I need some localization ammo for my translation gun. In the aforementioned game, Geno’s actual name is ♥♪!?.Īpparently, in the Japanese version, his name is something different. I have a question about one of my favorite games of all time. about Super Mario RPG, so let’s take a look! Maybe one day he'll become so big that it happens.I received a simple question from Jack C. Well, there it is, Allan blowing his one shot at getting someone who created a game he played to see his content. It was a frustrating game with a lot of design decisions that were utterly baffling and certain typos that stuck out like sore thumbs – not necessarily worse than any other fan project, but certainly a lot funnier.Īs a result of this game, " obilvion," "Haven't you ever heard of Hatsune Miku?," Rosalina and a wide variety of other memes cropped up.Īlso, in the comments for part 7, the creator came up and said Allan had "mixed emotions" about the whole thing. – plasticallan riffing on one rather infamous moment in Super Mario RPG ArmageddonĪllan streamed Super Mario RPG Armageddon 9.0 Content Edition in 2018. Uh, he's in this band, it's called Nine Inch Nails, it's really underground." "Also, if you haven't heard of, uh, my man Trent Reznor, please look him up. Most notably, Smithy took, what, over an hour? With some grinding, things would probably have been better. Weirdly enough, Allan hasn't played the actual game itself on stream or in an LP, but he has played two ROM hacks of the game - both of which have gone on to become massive meme factories among the community.Īllan Let's Played Super Mario RPG Revolution 5.0 way back in 2012, reaching into 2013. Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars is a game for the SNES.
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