Bakugan (video game)
This page needs some cleaning up to be presentable. This page appears to discuss two games with the same name while claiming there are three games, but does not offer a description of the games. Is this a single franchise or a set of unrelated properties with the same name? Either way, separate pages for each game are in order. |
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There have been three Bakugan Video games
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Tropes used in Bakugan (video game) include:
Tropes specific to the first Video Game:
- Artificial Stupidity: Prevalent in the Wii version (and possibly the other console versions), to the point where some people intentionally "skip" the AI throws so that they can land on a card for a change. The DS version has much better AI in this respect.
- Repeat after me: Dan is a handicap. It is likely you'll lose the first tag-team tournament solely because the idiot with Pyrus attribute (which has a disadvantage on the battlefield in question) doesn't make use of what he has. At least he always balances out the battles you're in by assisting you every time.
- Cap: You can only upgrade a bakugan 9 times. Additionally, each of the 5 stats caps at 5. The maximum base G-Power of a bakugan can only be obtained by ignoring all the other stats.
- Clear My Name: Leonidus (insert no 300 jokes) gets accused of a lot of things early on due to his late appearance (relative to every other bakugan) and coincidentally appearing just before Drago gets curbstomped by Vladitor. One of these includes an accusation of underhanded tactics against both Leonidus and his owner, you.
- Dark Is Not Evil: You have the option of starting with a set of Darkus bakugan at the start of the game, which sets Leonidus to be a Darkus bakugan. It doesn't affect the story one bit.
- Light Is Not Good: you also can have a Haos (light) Leonidus that initially wants the destruction of all bakugan. Incidentally, the ingame card artwork indicates Haos Leonidus is canon, since you cannot have more than one Leonidus. ever.
- Gang Up on the Human: In a 4-player free-for-all on the console version, The AI always helps whoever has the lowest G-Power level. even if that means helping someone who has 2 gate cards. On the DS version, the AI behaves more sensibly, always aiding the person with the least amount of gate cards.
- Game Breaker: Of all things, Darkus Leonidus with a specific set of 4 cards (one Gate Card, 3 Ability Cards) can easily break 1000 G-Power before adding pickups and whatever is generated in the battle itself. To say nothing about Omega Leonidas with Darkus Attribute and the same setup (substituting one ability card).
- Hello, Insert Name Here: You're just referred to as "Kid" or "That Guy" or other vague nouns.
- Interface Screw: The confusion and mirror Hyper Ability Cards on the console versions. Mirror reverses the controls for steering the bakugan. Confusion distorts the screen itself. Both also screw up the AI's steering.
- Luck-Based Mission: "Fickle Finger of Fate" randomly changes the rate that the bakugan generates G-Power in a battle.
- Sealed Evil in a Can: Vladitor, who is only able to escape his imprisonment when the events that caused the Bakugan to appear on Earth in the first place transpire. Leonidus eventually surfaces from the Doom Dimension, but only shortly before Vladitor and Marduk appear and start knocking out all of the bakugan players.
- Virtual Paper Doll: You can choose from 5-6 styles for any part of the body, and from 6 colors for each one. That is the extent of it in this game.
Tropes specific to the second Video Game (Defenders Of The Core):
- Artificial Stupidity: All AI opponents seem more interested in attacking the environment around you than you or your tower.
- Bad Future: The player is thrown into one were the Vexos won and are moving onto Earth.
- Big Bad: Spectra. Venoheld is present, but Spectra decides to seize the power of the core for himself.
- Crowning Music of Awesome: The stealth theme for Britain.
- Guilty Pleasure: It's a half-Button Masher half-Metal Gear Solid clone.
- Right Man in the Wrong Place: The player was simply a rookie Brawler who just happened to be thrown into a Bad Future where the Brawlers are defeated and powerless and they're the only one who can Brawl. Thus, the task of saving the world falls on them.
- Rule of Cool: Gate Cards? Ability Cards? Who cares! We have giant monster fights!
- Spanner in the Works: The Vexos' plan would've been pretty effective, if the player from another world hadn't ended up being completely immune to it.
- Schizophrenic Difficulty: The mission before the final boss is one of the most infuriating things ever put in a video game. You expect a really hard final battle. Well guess what? The boss can spend the entire fight hitting a rock as you kill it.
- The Starscream: Spectra ultimately chooses to steal the power of the core for himself instead of for the Vexos.
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