< Shout-Out

Shout-Out/Video Games

Can you recognize all Konami characters present in this Purikura sequence of this Konami game?[1]

This page lists Shout-Outs seen in video games.

Games with their own pages:


Creators with their own pages:


  • 2027: Daniel mentions in a conversation that War...war never changes.
  • The Irem In the Hunt video game is basically a giant shout-out to the Sega Master System II game Submarine Attack. Both feature Peace Through Superior Firepower/Missile Submarines that also have Peace Through Superior Firepower/Surface to Air Missiles and produce major missile Beam Spam. They have a similar number of levels and similar enemies. The boss that drops parts of an ancient ruin on top of you exists in both games, too.
  • Metal Slug has a reference to one of the bosses in R-Type. Just look at the similarity between the stage 5 boss from Metal Slug 7 and the stage 4 boss of the original R-Type here (the cores are highlighted for your convenience). The ending of Metal Slug X resembles the ending of Independence Day.
  • The Star Control video game series has enough shout-outs to earlier works of science fiction to have long "Influences and References" list in its own wiki. Perhaps the most obvious is the roster of human starship pilots, which includes such names as Kirk, Solo, and Adama—as well as literary shout-outs such as Ender, Halleck, Pirx, Van Rijn, and...Spiff. Several are hidden inside Techno Babble; especially subtle is a reference to Roadside Picnic. Even The Princess Bride gets a plug.
  • Boktai is stuffed with references to Westerns, most commonly Spaghetti Westerns. The main characters are named Django (after the protagonist of the Django movies, played by Franco Nero) and Sabata (after the protagonist of The Sabata Trilogy, played by Lee Van Clef). Django kills vampires by getting them into the sunlight - to do this, he has to drag their coffins, which they sleep in, outside, referencing how the Django from the movie carries a Gatling gun in a coffin he drags along behind him. In Boktai 2, at a certain point, you encounter a character who is obviously Solid Snake, but it's actually a duel Shout-Out - he declines to identify himself, instead calling himself a "man with no name", a Shout-Out to Clint Eastwood's character from the Dollars Trilogy (which is nonetheless in character for Snake). To further the reference, he's dressed with no bandanna, but with combed-back hair, a dark blue shirt, and tight brown jeans, the same outfit worn by the Man With No Name in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly during the scene where Tuco tries to hang him in the hotel room.
  • The easy mode for single-player in Battlefield: Bad Company has the line "hear the lamentations of... uhh...the people they know".
  • Morgan Industries, one of the factions from Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, has a subdivision called Morgansoft. Its slogan: "Where do you want your node today?"—a not-so-subtle reference to a famous real-life software company and its then-ongoing "where do you want to go today?" ad campaign.
  • Viewtiful Joe is full of Shout Outs, not only to Kamen Rider (an obviously huge influence), but to various other media (the game takes place in the world of films), including Devil May Cry, which was also created by director Hideki Kamiya.
    • Each level has a movie poster, shown during the credits (or in the Brady Games guide) they are, in order: Dracula, King Kong, Jaws, The Hunt for Red October, Devil May Cry, Gladiator, and Star Wars (the original)
      • They even have text references to the movies (or game) they come from.
    • Double Trouble's bosses are Captain Ersatzes of heroes like RoboCop and the Kamen Riders.
    • Lets face it, the games are practically a love letter of Shout Outs, there are so many different references, it's fun trying to find them all, a favorite of mine would be the Star Wars reference and plot point in the last level.
  • Baldur's Gate 2: Shadows of Amn and the Expansion set "Throne of Bhaal" contain a few shout-out to former fans/forum members, including the character of Lanfear (which is arguably a 2nd. degree "Wheel of Time" shout-out) in Shadows of Amn, and Draconis, Yakman and Gromnir in Throne of Bhaal (Gromnir's speech in-game also emulates the poster's style)
    • Baldur's Gate itself has a set of more low-key shout-outs, with the spider-queen Centeol being a mocking shout-out at a player in the game writer's old Dungeons & Dragons campaign who exclusively played tall, strikingly-beautiful amazons names Centeol. Edwin was a much better-liked character from the same gaming group.
    • In Neverwinter Nights 2: Mask of the Betrayer you can find an item named the Astral Rodent Charm. With the inscription "To M..." on the back. A shout out to Minsc and his miniature giant space hamster.
      • The vanilla original Neverwinter Nights had a reference to an Archdruid named Getafix.
      • A Dance With Rogues, a fan module series, includes the premade character Lyanna Stormborn, as a Shout-Out to A Song of Ice and Fire (which actually did inspire a lot of the story). The player's adventures seem somewhat similar to those of Arya Stark, after all...
  • In Icewind Dale 2, there's a bunch of mercenaries in the starting town (Targos) you can strike a conversation with. They go on to gripe about all sorts of menial tasks they had to do to "prove their prowress", the tasks in question being the very same you face at Candlekeep, the starting town (and tutorial level) of Baldur's Gate, an earlier Infinity Engine RPG. (Involving, at least, clearing rats out of a warehouse and fighting illusionary monsters.) The "other" adventuring band seems to have taken a rather more ...straightforward approach to the errands than the player at Baldur's Gate, though (e.g. ending the illusionary battle by whacking the illusionist over the head with a shield). There are also several references to the story of the earlier Icewind game that took place some thirty years before the sequel.
  • Alliance of Valiant Arms has one in the form of the "Winchester M1887S" shotgun, which is clearly made to look and operate like the Sawed-Off Shotgun used by Arnold Schwarzenegger in Terminator 2: Judgement Day. The player-character even does the iconic flip-cock move between shots.
  • Almost everyone in Devil May Cry has a name that references Dante's Divine Comedy. Those that do not usually reference something else in myth or legend - like Beowulf.
  • Super Robot Wars contains an incredible number of Shout Outs to the mecha genre, which should come as little surprise as the entire series can be considered a virtual love-letter to the genre and its fans. One famous example is Ryusei Date, an Ascended Fanboy who yells out phrases from his favorite shows while in battle. Further, some of the mecha unique to the game were made as homages to others; the most famous of these are the Grungust series, made to resemble Mazinger Z and its brethren, and the Huckebein series, which look like dead-ringers for Gundams. In their first appearances, they even went so far as to give one of the Huckebein's alternate colors the familiar red, white and blue scheme.
  • Nearly every game by Looking Glass Studios and the various companies its employees have formed since it closed down (including the System Shock games, Deus Ex and BioShock (series)) has used the number 451 (or 0451) as a door code. This is a reference to the novel Fahrenheit 451, and as a running reference could also be considered a shout out to the earlier games.
  • BioShock (series) has many of these, mainly references to Ayn Rand and her works (Rapture's society was founded on Randian and Objectivist philosophy).
    • One of the major characters is named Atlas. Another is coyly named Andrew Ryan.
    • There are a number of posters plastered around saying "Who is Atlas?".
    • Fontaine in his final mutated form resembles the famous statue of Atlas as seen on the cover of Atlas Shrugged.
    • Each bottle of Arcadia Merlot is embossed with the name "Fountainhead Cabarnet Sauvignon," as in The Fountainhead, another of Rand's novels.
    • Sander Cohen may be a reference to the pre-WWI playwright, songwriter, dancer, and director George M. Cohen. Sander Cohen and George M. Cohen both have a similar appearance and a similar way of criticizing people who do not perform a piece perfectly. However, George is less likely to kill you for it.
    • Non-Rand: One of the books in the library is titled Headology.
    • "Would you kindly find a crowbar or something?"
    • In the sequel one of the posters looks extremely like the usual cover of The Great Gatsby.
  • One of the characters in Homeworld, Group Captain Elson, is named after Peter Elson, an artist who inspired the artistic design of the game.
  • Escape Velocity includes numerous shout outs to Mystery Science Theater 3000 and its featured films: the adjacent systems of Manos and Torgo, another cluster of systems named Gamera, Guiron and Zigra, and a system named Gymkata containing a planet named Hikeeba. The Easter Eggs in the game include a killer forklift, the Satellite of Love and an alternate Opening Scroll parodying the MST3K Theme Tune. There are also a fair number of Hitchhiker's Guide references, with planets named Beeblebrox (in the Zaphod system) and Ursa Minor Beta, and "Mostly Harmless" as the combat rating just above "Harmless." Also, the uninhabited planet George Lucas's World lies in the THX 1138 system, and elsewhere there is a forest moon named Endor.
    • Elite (a major influence on Escape Velocity) also calls its two lowest combat ratings "Harmless" and "Mostly Harmless".
    • Escape Velocity Nova has a randomly-occurring Leviathan-class ship called CATS. Its picture in the communication dialog is the portrait of CATS from the Zero Wing opening, and its lines of dialog are also from the Zero Wing opening.
  • The MMORPG EverQuest is full of these. Ironically, it is against the rules for players to name themselves in such a fashion, but it is fine for the designers to name NPCs to make a shout out.
  • City of Heroes has numerous COUNTLESS shout outs, and gains more with every release.
    • The police contacts in almost every city zone are thinly-disguised versions of famous TV cops, including characters from Dragnet, Due South, and Miami Vice.
    • One mission sends you after the "Overation Oscillithruster".
      • Even better, one of the types of Enhancements is the actual Oscillation Over-thruster itself. It makes your Phasing powers better.
    • Another instructs you to rescue "Stephen Fayte"—his surname was Strangefate in earlier versions—who is repeatedly described by everyone in the mission as "a gifted surgeon, nothing more," although he is said to be often mistaken for Earth's greatest sorceror.
    • One radio mission has the hero sent to rescue "Dr. Frank N. Scott" from the clutches of the bad guys. When the hero stumbles across Dr. Scott, he's reciting a ritual to create a "time warp" that involves a "jump to the left" and a "step to the right." When you interrupt the bad guys, a mini-version of the "Janet! Dr. Scott! Janet! Brad! Rocky!" exchange occurs.
    • You got a rock.
  • Blizzard Entertainment tends to use a lot of them (with World of Warcraft having its own page):
    • Diablo II, in the Expansion Pack Lord of Destruction, has a late game boss fight against three Barbarian Ancients. The barbarians in this game have a very Norse-inspired culture. The three ancients bear a strong resemblance to Olaf the Stout, Erik the Swift and Baleog the Fierce, the three Lost Vikings of the early Blizzard platform puzzle game by the same name.
      • World of Warcraft has a similar reference. One of the miniboss encounters in Ulduman, you fight three dwarves that are named after the three Lost Vikings.
    • Blizzard's RTS games, the Warcraft and StarCraft series, carry most of their meta-humor in the annoyed phrases said by various units when they are clicked repeatedly, as you may notice in the Starcraft ShoutOut page.
    • There are many lines like those in Warcraft III. For example, the bandit units, if clicked on enough, will quote Ulysses McGill from Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? repeating the line "I don't want Fop, goddammit, I'm a Dapper Dan man!" The human peasants and knights also reference Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
    • "This one time, at bandit camp..."
    • "My Warhammer cost forty K."
    • At least three units make lines about "seeing dead people."
    • A line from the map Deception: "Advanced Combat Training: Hiten Mitsurugi Ryu".
  • Hellgate:London, features a Wart, a young boy with a prosthetic leg, who will give you his spare pegleg to use as a weapon. This is a reference to a similar, but more obnoxious, character from Diablo, Wirt, whose pegleg could be used as a weapon in the sequel. This is made more explicit by the Peg Leg having the flavor text "This won't cost me 50 Palladium, will it?", a reference to Wirt's tendency to charge the player character for anything he could get away with—most noticeably, access to his shop of rare items. Hellgate: London was developed by many of the same people as the two Diablo games.
  • Super Mario Galaxy features an in-game storybook with an art style noticeably similar to the illustrations from The Little Prince. Many people had commented on how Super Mario Galaxy was oddly reminiscent of the book before its release.
    • There's also a small mechanical planetoid in the Buoy Base Galaxy that looks like a Pokeball. Also, at some point during the Space Junk Galaxy, Mario lands on Olimar's ship.
  • Of all the places to find a reference to The Rocky Horror Picture Show, who would have expected Mario Party 8? During Bowser's Warped Orbit, if a player lands on a Reversal Space, Bowser mentions doing "the crime warp".
  • Dr. Kleiner's pet headcrab in Half-Life 2 is called "Lamarr" and sometimes "Hedy". This is a Shout-Out to Hedy Lamarr who, aside from being a rather attractive actress, co-invented the early form of the frequency-hopping technology vital to modern wireless communication.
  • Supreme Commander 2 has a subtle Firefly shout out late in the game:

Which one should I attack first?
The ugly one.
.....could you be more specific?

    • Are you sure it's to Firefly? It sounds more like to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2, where they fight the two mutants and go, "You take the ugly one." "Which one's the ugly one?"
  • The Elder Scrolls is full of Shout Outs. Almost all of the gods in the series are named after people who worked on the game, and many NPCs have names that reference other fictional characters (such as Lucien Lachance and Vincente Valteri), sports teams (Tarhiel) and characters from folklore ("Springheel" Jakben of Imbel) Oblivion even has a ruined city called Vindeisel.
    • In the fourth Elder Scrolls game Oblivion, there's even a (possible) shout out to Under Siege. One quest involves a floating inn being hijacked by a group of bandits, and when asked who the main character is, there's an option to reply "I'm just the ship's cook".
    • There is an item in Oblivion caalled blue Suede Shoes a reference to the song by Carl Perkins.
    • Morrowind had some rather silly ones, such as some of the interior cells in a Sixth House base be named after Pokémon.
    • There's an Indiana Jones Shout-Out in Oblivion: A quest wherein a rival treasure hunter tries to take your spoils right as you emerge from a trap-filled ruin is named "Nothing You Can Possess."
  • Capcom's Dead Rising allows the player to unlock Mega Man's costume, boots, helmet, and arm cannon through various gaming feats. In addition, some of Frank's fighting moves are straight out of Street Fighter.
  • The MMORPG Guild Wars has a whole list of Shout-Outs in the skills players can equip. Interestingly, most of them are "shout" skills, like "For Great Justice!" and "Make Your Time!" (Zero Wing), "I Meant to Do That!" (Pee-wee's Big Adventure), "None Shall Pass!" (the Black Knight in Monty Python and the Holy Grail) and "Can't Touch This!" (MC Hammer). A few fire elemental spells are named after Rodgort, which in turn comes from Trogdor, the dragon created by Strong Bad in Homestar Runner. And then there's the berserking dwarf Kilroy Stonekin, obviously inspired by the famed Leeroy Jenkins, right down to the battlecry.
    • A less commonly known one is the skill Headbutt, which for a short time, was named Enadiz Headbutt (Enadiz is Zidane spelled backwards). This is an obvious reference to the following meme link. Alas, the skill was renamed to just plain Headbutt in time for Nightfalls release.
    • There is also The Black Beast of Arrgh another shout out to Monty Python and the Holy Grail but this monster is actually black rather than being green like in the movie.
  • The Xenosaga series had a number of shoutouts to its spiritual predecessor Xenogears. Xenosaga Episode III was especially chock-full of them. The most elaborate one is Mai Magus, who has a guardian mecha named Leupold, lives with her grandfather, Aizen, and lost her father, Tethlla. This is a direct parallel to Maria Balthasar from Xenogears, who has a guardian mecha, Seibzehn, lives with her grandfather, Isaac, and lost her father, Nikolai. Each of these characters are also visual expies of their counterparts in the other game.
    • Abel is a Captain Ersatz of Fei, the protagonist of Xenogears. In fact, Fei's first incarnation was called Abel.
    • The bosses in Abel's Ark are all shout outs to particular mecha in Xenogears.
    • Abel's Ark itself resembles the Eldridge.
    • The core of Abel's Ark is very similar to the chamber that holds the final bosses in Xenogears.
    • The music in Abel's Ark has audio references to "One Who Bares Fangs at God" and "The One Who is Torn Apart"
    • Nephilim is an Expy of Elly, made all the more apparent when she "grows up" at the end of the game.
    • Jin dresses like Citan, and uses a katana like him. They even share a surname, Uzuki, though it is an alias in Citan's case.
    • Jr. uses dual pistols, like Billy Lee Black, but is closer in personality to Bart Fatima.
    • One scene with Kevin and Shion in their bedroom looks very similar to a scene with Kim and Elly in their bedroom.
    • Omega Universitas is almost identical to Weltall, and it even turns into Omega Id, which is based on Weltall-Id, Weltall's super mode.
  • Drakengards Easter Egg is a Shout-Out to cavia inc., who develops the Ace Combat series of games and also developed the Flight Sim portions of Drakengard.
  • Are there any recent games made by Namco Bandai which don't make a shout out to Pac-Man?
  • The Wolf Bout in Shadow Hearts Covenant features several references to the Gundam franchise. For example, the Black Dog Stars are based on the short-lived Goldfish Poop Gang of the original series, while Blanca's ultimate move, Red Comet, is a Shout-Out to the nickname of recurring Gundam character Char Aznable.
    • In From The New World, a convict named Smith in Alcatraz asks you to spread a message to his ally Murdock. Murdock tells you to give the message to Peck, and Peck asks you to send the message to Baracus. Sound familiar?
    • Another in From The New World: The Erick Theatre on Chelsea in New York City is showing The Phantom of the Opera.
  • The Monkey Island series, being created by Lucasfilm's game division Lucasarts (formerly Lucasfilm Games), includes dozens of shout outs to Lucas' movies, including the number 1138 popping up a lot, a bridge troll being actually George Lucas in disguise, and wall graffiti suggesting its readers to call 1-800-STAR-WARS (which, at the time, was LucasArts' hint line number) "for a good time".
  • Max Payne, heavily inspired by Hollywood action movies with intricate gunplay and lots of slow motion, has a few references to its influences: The password to a criminal-operated laundromat is "John Woo", and a certain lobby shootout scene near the endgame seems very similar to the one in The Matrix. One of the bad guys in the game is "A real Keyser Soze type."
    • In the second Max Payne game there is a billboard advertising a kung fu movie starring Kenneth Yeung. In real life, Kenneth Yeung is the creator of the Kung Fu mod for the first Max Payne game.
  • The Quest for Glory series contained a number of these. The most prominent example took place in the first game, where the player was required to answer three questions in order to enter Erasmus' castle. The whole sequence was a direct reference to the similar one in Monty Python and the Holy Grail. The VGA version also included "I want to be a pirate" as a possible answer. In addition, in the fifth game, if the main character drowned, the game over text would mention Guybrush Threepwood's ability to hold his breath for 10 minutes.
  • The doujin game Eternal Fighter Zero has many references to Key Visual Arts works, as well as for other fighting games. In particular, Mio Kouzuki changes costumes with each special attack, referencing Street Fighter, The King of Fighters, Shingetsutan Tsukihime, Darkstalkers, Cardcaptor Sakura, and more.
    • Kano Kirishima's entire set of spells is directly lifted from the Mage and Wizard classes in the MMORPG Ragnarok Online. Her staff is an actual item from the game (Mighty Staff)
  • Fallout is full of Shout Outs to almost everything including, but not limited to: SF movies, history, Monty Python, famous boxers, movie stars, history, etc.
  • The Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch from Monty Python and the Holy Grail shows up as a weapon in a number of games, including Worms, Bard's Tale, and the MMORPG Asheron's Call.
    • ...and Fallout 2 has a special encounter where you meet Brotherhood of Steel paladins searching for said item.
      • Also, the "Holy Orbs of Antioch" used by the Black Templars in Warhammer 40,000.
      • Really, Fallout 2 deserves its own entry...after all, you can encounter a crashed Star Trek shuttle at one point.
    • Fallout Tactics follows this line, as most of its special encounters are shout outs or parodies ranging from Horsemen of the Apocalypse to the battery bunnies to "Hasta la vista, calfy.", also featured Deathclaw Liberation and several famous...errr...vehicles.
    • Fallout 3 continues the proud tradition with mockingly named weapons, alien crash sites, three dog shouting out to Firefly with his 'You can't stop the signal' and Babylon 5 when he calls you the 'last best hope of humanity'.
    • Fallout: New Vegas has plenty of shout outs of its own, and the latest DLC Gun Runners' Arsenal adds a bunch more in the names of some of the challenges added. A Slave Obeys (Kill Mr. House with a Golf Club), Even a God-King Can Bleed (Cripple Caesar's head with a throwing spear) Benefit or Hazard (Kill robots with 5.56 Pistols), etc.
    • A less obvious shout-out (that may or may not have been intended as such) appears in the Fallout3 expansion The Pitt. The sub-human creatures deemed "trogs" bear an uncanny resemblance to a subterranean pack of predators from a certain movie.
  • A monster in Hades in Zork: Grand Inquisitor, while listing things adventurers wanted mentioned red pages and blue pages. Red and blue pages are things the player needs in Myst, the first graphic adventure to use video and 3D images.
  • Metroid has multiple references to the Alien series of films. Most obviously, the recurring boss Ridley, who shares a name with Ridley Scott, director of the original Alien. More subtly, SR-388, the home planet of the parasitic Metroids, has a name in the same format as LV-426, the moon the parasitic Xenomorphs were first encountered on...and the Metroid egg seen at the end of Metroid 2 and the start of Super Metroid uncannily resembles a facehugger egg sac.
  • In Suikoden, the home base of the characters is always somewhere near water—it's actually an enormous ship, in the most extreme case. This is a subtle Shout Out to the novel from which the series gains its name and some of its themes—including the recurring 108 characters—in which the bandit protagonists were based out of a marsh.
  • The boss of the Bonus Dungeon of Dark Cloud 2 was the Big Bad of the first game.
  • Call of Duty 4 features several shoutouts: Apocalypse Now (Charlie Don't Surf), Dr. Strangelove (No Fighting In The War Room), Airplane! (Surely you can't be serious?), and Aliens (I like to keep this handy for close encounters) and (WE ARE LEAVING) to name a few.
    • World At War featured a few, too. The mission "Vendetta" was chock-full of shoutouts to Enemy at the Gates, like the fountain scene and the general theme (Soviet sniper tracks down an evil Nazi officer in Stalingrad). The very first mission also features an amusing reference to Saving Private Ryan, in the form of an NPC named (as you can probably imagine) "Private Ryan", whom you can "save" from a suicidal Japanese soldier. The joke is a multi-layered one, as your player character's name is "Miller", just like the movie's protagonist.
    • The original game includes a lot of levels as (somewhat loose) homages to various classic war movies: the D-Day levels all draw from The Longest Day, the Americans clearly reenact The Dirty Dozen, and Enemy At The Gates gets pulled out for Stalingrad again. The expansion adds Band of Brothers and The Guns of Navarone to the list.
    • Modern Warfare 2, meanwhile, features a firefight in what is pretty blatantly the shower room from The Rock.
  • Nethack is crammed chock-full of these. A wizard or valkyrie who gets very hungry will receive the message "Wizard/Valkyrie needs food badly!" as appropriate. Dismounting an unnamed horse results in the message "You've been through the dungeon on a horse with no name."; doing so while hallucinating will append the line "It felt good to be out of the rain." The Rogue and Sokoban levels emulate their namesakes' gameplay to an extent. The entire Tourist class - especially the class quest - is one big shout out the the Discworld books. Player characters who steal from shops may find themselves assaulted by the Keystone Kops. Many of the references are incredibly obscure and only show up in extremely unlikely circumstances. The Dev Team Thinks of Everything, indeed!
  • In Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines, you can at one point choose to save a desperately ill character's life by feeding her your blood. The cutscene is identical to the scene in which Lestat embraces Claudia in Interview with the Vampire. In the same game, one of the "good" endings is a Shout-Out to Raiders of the Lost Ark, with the Sarcophagus being stored away as in the final scene. Of course, that shot itself was a Shout-Out to Citizen Kane.
  • In Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, there are a couple of Shout Outs to the developers' native Scotland. San Andreas, the name of the fictional state in which the game is set, is an obvious reference to Scotland's patron saint, Andrew, and the railroad bridge leading from San Fierro is obviously modelled on the Forth Railway Bridge. There are probably several more in the series.
  • Similarly, one of the cities in the game Just Cause is named "Nuevo Estocolmo", being an obvious reference to Stockholm, capital of the developers' native Sweden.
  • Beyond Good and Evil has a reference to its creator's most well-known work, the Rayman series, in the form of one of its photographable animals. The animal is a cartoonish mosquito found frequently in the Rayman universe, and has the species name A. raymanis. The main character of another Michel Ancel production, Tonic Trouble, appears as the Mascot of the game's brand of healing items in a Parody Commercial.
  • Almost every acheivement in Army of Two is a reference to some famous movie.
  • The Rank 9 Assassin in No More Heroes, Dr. Peace, sometimes holds his guns out at his sides, arms slightly bent. This is exactly the same way Curtis Blackburn holds his guns during his boss fight in Killer7, Suda 51's previous game. Dr. Peace bears more than a slight resemblance to Curtis as well (the major difference is that his hair is brown while Curtis's is white).
    • There are several other Killer7 references as well. Bad Girl has a "chiller7" brand fridge, and the techniques Lovikov teaches you bear names that refer to the Smiths. ("Memory of Mask": MASK DE Smith, "Memory of Child": Con Smith, "Memory of Demon": Dan Smith, etc.)
    • Not to mention the numerous Star Wars references, ranging from laser sword based combat to mooks dressed in Darth Vader costumes to the end-of-mission congratulatory screen, which sports a thematic pastiche of the Star Wars theme and ends with the famous hyperspace visual effect from the movies.
    • There's even one to God Hand. Lose a Blade Lock clash against Rank 4 and he turns Travis' beam katana into a powerless, heart-topped wand. Players of God Hand will recognize it as Shannon's weapon of choice.
      • Also, the final boss has a similar fighting style to God Hand's Gene, a similar dodging animation, and is called "Jeane".
    • And also one to Back to The Future: The To Be Continued message.
    • Henry, a Scottish-accented Badass Longcoat with a Beam Claymore, seems like a Highlander shoutout.
    • And when you die, the test card with the Zaka TV logo is taken from one of Suda's other games, Michigan: Report From Hell.
      • Zaka TV also makes an appearance in Killer7
    • While on the subject of Suda games, the hotel manager in Killer7 bares an uncanny resemblance to Edo Macalister, the hotel manager from Flower, Sun, and Rain. Furthermore, when you talk to him, Gymnopedie plays in the background, the main theme of hotel Flower Sun & Rain
  • The ending of this webgame appears to be a shoutout to THX-1138.
  • One of the creatures in Riven: The Sequel to Myst was named a Ytram, which was named such after the creators of Myst and Riven received numerous messages from an overzealous fan. "Ytram" is his name spelled backwards.
    • It's the poisonous frog that you trap on one of the islands. Shout-Out or Take That?
  • 2K sports lacked the NFL license for All-Pro Football 2k8, denying them the use of real NFL stadium names. They instead created venues such as Wolfram & Hart Coliseum, Weyland Corporate Field and Blue Sun Stadium.
  • A mini-game in Chrono Trigger requires the player to identify one of three identical men, named Vicks (Biggs), Wedge, and Piett. Biggs and Wedge are Luke's wingmen when blowing up the first Death Star, and Admiral Piett was an Imperial Officer. Biggs and Wedge also appear in Final Fantasy IV: The After Years (Two soldiers who accompany Ceodore in the beginning of the game, and also retconned into the original Final Fantasy IV), Final Fantasy VI (The two soldiers accompanying Terra in the beginning), Final Fantasy VII (Two AVALANCHE members), Final Fantasy VIII (The Quirky Miniboss Squad (Or maybe Terrible Trio)), and Final Fantasy X (Two guards you can recruit for blitzball).
  • A T. rex shaped robot enemy Spyro: Enter the Dragonfly is known as the R-1000. It is an obvious reference to the T-1000 of Terminator fame right down to the liquid metal construction.
    • Likewise in Year of the Dragon, in the level 'Desert Ruins', there's an explorer called Tara, who is a not-so-subtle parody of Lara Croft. Not only does she have large...bazoomas, when she sees Spyro, she complains that she spends "all day moving crates, and pushing switches", only for someone else to come and steal her treasure.
      • Another example from Year of the Dragon would be one of Shelia the Kangaroo's stages. Unlike the rest of the game, it's almost completely viewed from the side. Its name? 'Krash Kangaroo.
      • And the first-person shooter section with goals entitled, 'You're Doomed!' and 'You're Still Doomed!'.
      • Another one from the same game. Moneybags claims that Sgt. Byrd is pining for the fjords. Not that children would get that one.
        • The script writers were apparently fans of British comedy: the Sorceress' dialogue includes a line which blends catchphrases from Dads Army and Allo Allo, as part of a scene which introduces a character modeled after British aerial aces from World War II.
      • In Enchanted Towers, one task involves rescuing a wolf called Farley, and returning them to their owner, named Mowat. At one point, Mowat says "[...] Don't cry, wolf, never cry, wolf...". Then entire thing is a Shout-Out to the book Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat.
    • A Hero's Tail has a scene where the Professor advises Spyro on what he needs to reach a level. Most of his suggestions are shout outs to other games.
    • From Enter the Dragonfly: "You're not hired for your brains, you dinosaurian landmass. Keep quiet or I'll put you back where I found you, unemployed in Molten Crater!" Is it just me, or does this sound extremely similar to a line in The Princess Bride?
    • There's one even in the first game, to Parappa the Rapper. In the "Gnorc Cove" level, when Spyro rescues Tomas, at the end of their conversation Spyro goes "You gotta believe!" in a similar tone to that of Parappa.
  • Dragon Quest Heroes: Rocket Slime contains shout outs to other Square Enix-published series, such as a Platypunk ally named Ducktor Cid (a reference to the recurring character name in Final Fantasy) and the hero goes up against a tank with a treant-like appearance called Chrono Twigger (an obvious reference to Chrono Trigger), whose in-game logo even resembles the Chrono Trigger logo. These two are notable because the series referenced were formerly Square series, whereas Dragon Quest was an Enix series.
  • Elite Beat Agents has a stage whose top screen bears a striking resemblance to a Light Gun Game, complete with a gauge showing how much ammo nuts the protagonist has left in his current magazine. Anyone who remembers hearing the infamous "RELOAD! RELOAD! SHOOT OUTSIDE OF THE SCREEN!" in The House of the Dead is going to get a kick out of failing the second section of the song.
    • Also, the two pets in the game are a dog and a cat named Sam and Max. The dog is the one named Sam. Also, the protagonist of "Romancing Meowzilla" was a character in Ouendan, the game EBA was based on.
  • Super Mario RPG has the Pipe Vault area, a one-block-wide underground area reminiscent of Super Mario Bros.' underground stages, complete with their music and pipes containing Piranha Plants. And then there's the curtained alcove in Booster Tower, where Mario will transform into his eight-bit self for a few seconds.
    • In addition, there are a couple of easy-to-miss cameos made by Link and Samus.
    • The game also has references to several Final Fantasy elements, considering Squaresoft helped make the game. Culex, a Bonus Boss, has a battle theme, victory theme, and prelude all in the style of Final Fantasy IV.
      • The game also has a less obvious shout-out to Final Fantasy in the form of one late-game boss; the Czar Dragon and its undead counterpart Zombone. They take their names from two enemies from Final Fantasy VI, although the former was Dummied Out.
      • Culex also has a fire crystal, a water crystal, an earth crystal, and a wind crystal, recalling the crystals from Final Fantasy I, Final Fantasy IV, and Final Fantasy V.
    • Go, go, Axem Rangers...
    • It is traditional in Paper Mario for one area in each game to allow Mario to turn into his eight-bit version. His companions go eight-bit as well.
    • Super Paper Mario takes it a step further- whenever a character grabs a star, they turn into a giant 8-bit version of themselves that rampages across the screen. Inversely, another powerup gives you a small team of 8-bit versions of yourself that surround you and help defeat enemies, though they rarely last long.
    • The dojo from Paper Mario contains opponents named Chan and Lee.
  • La-Mulana, aside from the general Homage to the MSX, has many references to specific games, some of them quite obscure:
    • A ROM combo involving Castlevania will make your whip more powerful.
    • Two ROM combinations let you play parodies of Parodius and Snatcher.
    • Combining the two Metal Gear ROMs will make a "!" appear over you when you solve a puzzle.
    • Many of Elder Xelpud's seemingly-nonsensical quotes allude to MSX games:

"With my spare money, all I could buy was Salamander. I always got the bad ending." (In the MSX Salamander, you need to have Nemesis 2 in the second cartridge slot to get the good ending.)
"Up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B A. What's that?" (none of Konami's MSX games uses the Konami code, which originated on NES/Famicom games, and Xelpud is a staunch Famicom hater).
"I wonder what happened to Venom? I haven't seen him since I heard him laughing while in a time slip. I certainly hope he's doing well." (Venom is the Big Bad of the MSX Nemesis 2 and 3, and the ending of Nemesis 3 has the protagonist fleeing from him in a time warp.)
"I can't believe that Simon is a model pervert." (Simon Belmont is described that way in the MSX mahjong game Hai no Majutsushi, also known as Mahjong Wizard.

Barret: Y'all Shinra're the VERMIN, killing the planet! And that makes you King VERMIN! So shu'up, jackass!

    • Speaking of which, here's Rikku's reaction to one certain enemy.
  • Viva Pinata contains numerous shout-outs to other Rareware productions in many of the garden decorations—there's a "Bear and Bird" statue of Banjo and Kazooie, the "Dastardos Scarer" that keeps the evil doctor out of your garden looks like Mumbo from the same game, and there's even a "Pirate Statue" commemorated to a built-into-something-else-entirely SNES project of Rare's called "Dream." (The description even says, "Dedicated to a dream that will never die...") There's also an old arcade machine that's "lost its Killer Instinct."
    • As well as the Mallowolf's attack being to throw amulets from Sabre Wulf, and it's home looking like the head of the wolf from said game.
  • Conker's Bad Fur Day has so many shout-outs that it's hard to keep track of them all. Which is why there's a separate page for them all.
  • The Sonic the Hedgehog series is fairly laden with obvious references, especially with the Death Egg (originating in Sonic the Hedgehog 2, and seen many times since). But there's also less obvious ones, such as G.U.N, a play on S.H.I.E.L.D.
    • In Sonic Unleashed, like one of the shout-outs in Pokémon above, Eggman can be seen with a Sega Dreamcast in his cockpit.
      • In Shadow the Hedgehog, if you do certain paths, you hear two of them. The first is after completing the first level with the "hero" ending, Sonic says "I guess that means...welcome to the next level." "Welcome to the Next Level" was one of Sega's old slogans. The second occurs on any level that occurs on the ARK, you will hear the guards occasionally say "Protect Yuji Naka", a shout out to the person credited to the creation of Sonic.
      • There's a long tradition of Sega consoles appearing in Sonic. In one of the old books he owned a Game Gear which he could use to reprogram Robotnik's robots. Whether he ever played Sonic the Hedgehog is thankfully unexplored.
    • The arguments forever rage on over whether Super Sonic or Super Saiyan came first.
    • A quest in Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood tasks you with retrieving a shopkeeper's prized possession in exchange for a piece of Eggman's old tech, which is needed to advance the story. The missing item in question? The shopkeeper's beloved red stapler.
    • Eggman's robot storage facility in Sonic Battle is named Gimme Shelter.
  • God Hand has tons of these. Elvis wears Akuma's prayer beads, Gene has the Shoryuken as a juggle move, and one of the God Reels is 100 Fists, a Spam Attack that references Fist of the North Star. There are also many, many tips of the hat to Clover Studios' previous games, such as Okami (one of the Chuihauhas you can race is called Amaterasu) and Viewtiful Joe (the Mad Midget Five). Elvis himself is a giant Shout-Out to, well, Elvis Presley.
  • The Wing Commander universe has plenty of these:
    • Many of them can be found in "Star* Soldier", the manual for Wing Commander Arena, mostly in the form of references to members of the online fandom.
    • The galaxy map that shipped with some versions of Prophecy, has stars named after famous science fiction authors, online fandom members, and famous astronauts.
      • In one particular case, a Real Life star, Barnard's Star, was renamed to Bernard's Star, to honor Jason Bernard, who played Captain William Eisen in Wing Commander III and Wing Commander IV. Bernard passed away shortly after the release of the latter game. See also the TCS Eisen from Wing Commander Prophecy, mentioned in a character's dialog.
    • The credits to the last two games of the series, Wing Commander Prophecy Advance (GBA port) and Wing Commander Arena (Xbox Live Arcade) give thanks to several members of the fandom who helped with continuity and technical issues during the production of those games.
    • In game examples include Colonel Blair, which comes from the fan name of the first two games being Blue Hair, as well as his callsign Maverick, stemming from Chris Robert's love of Top Gun.
      • And in Heart of the Tiger, Blair is played by Mark Hamill. The end game, which has you flying down a trench run to blow up Kilrah, is a direct take off of Star Wars.
        • Lampshaded by Tom Wilson in an outtake that is included at the end, where he puts a spin on one of the scenes where he plays Maniac.
      • And yet another Shout-Out, this time to The Terminator. The Nonstandard Game Over has the Kilrathi invade Earth, and we get a nice scene where a furry foot crushes a human skull, replete with the sky aflame in nuclear fire.
  • Final Fantasy XII really enjoys doing this. The most obvious ones come in the Gilgamesh fights. As you battle him, he pulls the swords of previous Final Fantasy characters out to attack you with, including the Buster Sword (which has the kanji for "Replica" spray-painted on its side), Brotherhood, and Odin's Zantetsuken. For a change of pace, he also breaks out Loto's Sword.
    • Just in case it wasn't clear from the Buster Sword, every one of these swords is a fake and has a pretty obvious tell that gives it away. The Revolver has the wrong symbol and no trigger, The Orichalcum is too long, etc.
    • The Firefly accessory drops EXP gain to 0, which gives you barely enough to scratch by with, just like its keepsake.
  • Final Fantasy IX contains many shout outs to previous games in the series, most of which are described in Mythology Gag.
  • Final Fantasy I has a Shout-Out to The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time in the Dawn of Souls remake. When you talk to the fairy that opens the next level in Whisperwind Cove, she says "Hey! Listen!". The mage town in the same area also has a Red Mage mention blue magic, which would come in later games in the series.
    • Don't forget that in the Dawn of Souls version at least, there is a headstone in Elfheim dedicated to Link.
  • The World Ends With You contains a shout-out to the original Final Fantasy in the form of an Easter Egg. The description of the Black Cat Atlas, Vol. 10 reads: "Playing Reaper Creeper requires Matoya's Spell, but "NEERC SEVAS EHT TARDNALD LOH" is a mouthful, so most folks don't bother!" Read backwards, holding L and R at the same time on the save screen displays how long you've been playing. In Final Fantasy I, the talking brooms in Matoya's cave would only say "TCELES B HSUP"...an indicator to press B+ Select on your controller to access the world map.
    • Minamimoto uses an attack in a cutscene that's another shout out to Final Fantasy as well as an obscure math pun. He calls it "Level i Flare", a reference to the recurring level-targeting Blue Magic throughout the series; targeting everything with a level divisible to whatever x is in "Level x Flare", usually 5 (and since i is the square root of negative 1, and -1 times -1 equals 1, and everything is divisible cleanly by 1, that means that every number, real or imaginary, is a multiple of i. Nothing escapes Level i flare, no matter what its level is.)
  • In Final Fantasy V Advance, one of the new jobs is Gladiator. The description of the Gladiator's !Finisher ability says:

"Powerful strike that whenever hits an enemy, attacks its weakpoint For Massive Damage."

  • The PC RPG Septerra Core from Valkyrie Studios has a shout-out to the "Aren't you a little short for a Stormtrooper?" scene from Star Wars when Maya infiltrates Connors' pirate base.
    • It also features another shout out to a George Lucas work with the number 1138 cropping up in the form of an override password.
  • It might be stretching it, but it's possible that the chapter of Super Paper Mario in which Mario breaks Mimi's favorite vase and then is forced to work to pay it off might be a reference to Sha Wujing from Journey to the West.
  • The "Party RPG" Dokapon Kingdom features a character name Robo-Agent. While he's normally a friendly, affable robot, when someone puts money into his mouth, he turns into a Killer Robot named Robo-Sassin. When he transforms into Robo-Sassin, he shouts: "EX-TER-MI-NATE!"
  • In the visual novel Fate/stay night (a game arguably already full of shoutouts to old legends and myths), there are skits that you earn depending how many "Bad Ends" you receive. The second of which features Rin Tohsaka and Sakura Matou, two of the game's heroines, in a rather blatant Shout-Out to the Touhou series, complete with danmaku patterns and parodies of the Spell Card activations.
  • Every single game in Namco's Tales (series) have shout outs to each other (with the exception of Tales of Phantasia, which is the first game and therefore has nothing to shout out to). In Tales of the Abyss, various other Tales characters are Bonus Bosses; in another Tales game, a character has a Mieu keychain (Mieu is the cute annoying creature from Tales of the Abyss); in Tales of Destiny, the character Klarth from Tales of Phantasia makes a cameo; and so on. A fan favorite is the Indignation spell which has appeared in every game in the franchise, with nearly the same casting incantation. The first scene where Indignation appears (the intro to Tales of Phantasia) can be replicated almost exactly in Tales of Eternia if you know when and where.
  • Wario Land: Shake It! has a level call "Wreck Train"—the music of this level seems to have a shout to Indiana Jones.
    • The same level may also be a reference to the train level in Wario Land II.
  • Freddy Pharkas, Frontier Pharmacist, a fairly obscure Sierra game, makes a few shout-outs to other Sierra games. One of the people in the bar is Zircon Jim Laffer, ancestor to Leisure Suit Larry (whom he resembles closely). There's a bridge that informs you every time you cross it that you have only three crossings left (the number never goes down), referencing a bridge that actually does have limited crossings in King's Quest II. Dying in certain circumstances causes the narrator, wrapping up Freddy's story, launch into new ones, containing references to another King's Quest game, The Adventures of Willy Beamish, and (in a non-Sierra reference) The Music Man.
  • La Tale has a minigame named Dot Nuri, which is a clear shout out to Super Mario Bros., right down to the low-res mushroom enemies.
  • American Mcgees Grimm turns many of the Grimmified fairy tales into pastiches of various movies. For instance:

The Master Thief: Dracula
Iron John: The Terminator, complete with an Ahnuld-soundalike and "Prince Connor"
The Pied Piper: Surprisingly obscurely, German expressionist films such as M and Metropolis; the scene at the end is virtually identical to the "Moloch Machine" scene in Metropolis, and the Pied Piper is voiced by a convincing Peter Lorre impersonator.

  • There are a lot of strange creature in Spore, but one of the stranger Maxis-created ones are the Barney Empire. And yes, they were purple dinosaurs. Oddly enough, they also lived in close proximity with the Grox, which might say something about Barney...
  • In Destroy All Humans! 2, there's a mission that requires you to kill one Agent 47 in a discreet manner.
  • An early mission in MySims Kingdom requires you to build "solid gears of metal" in order to open a gate to another part of the first island.
  • At least two in Ryu Ga Gotoku/Yakuza:
    • Goro Majima is a sadistic, unstable gangster who literally laughs at pain- even his own- and is willing to kill his own henchmen for the slightest infraction. Not to mention he's so obsessed with killing the protagonist himself that he'll do just about anything to stop someone who's near beating him to the punch. And in the American version (Yakuza) he's voiced by Mark Hamill.
    • The main villain of the game, Akira Nishiki. A childhood friend of the protagonist who eventually turns into a Magnificent Bastard with ambitions of controlling the entire Yakuza organization and ruthlessly resorts to almost any means to achieve his goals. And in Yakuza he's voiced by Michael Rosenbaum.
  • The Last Remnant has a few shout outs, but at least three to Devil May Cry.
    • The two yama NPCs in Athlum and Ghor are named Vergil and Dante, respectively.
    • Rush (voiced by Johnny Yong Bosch) at one point shouts "Jackpot!"
    • A tournament's slogan is "Welcome back to the stage of history!"
    • Almost all of the Remnants and formations are shout outs to previous entries in the SaGa series. Then there's the Bilqis, a weapon that looks like a cross between an axe and a chainsaw...
  • Kingdom of Loathing gives shout-outs to absolutely anything and everything. It would be easier to list things which it doesn't reference.
  • In Super Mario Bros 3, the Warp Whistle item plays the same musical notes as the Recorder in The Legend of Zelda, and it also summons a tornado that carries the player character elsewhere the same as the Recorder does.
    • A redone version of the tune can be heard on the title screen of The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time.
    • In the English version only, at the end of the game, Princess Peach says, "Thank you. But our Princess is in another castle!...Just kidding! Ha ha ha! Bye bye." This refers to "Thank you Mario! But our princess is in another castle!" from the original Super Mario Bros.
  • In the custom map "Defense of the Ancients" for Warcraft III, there's a custom character made for it named Lina Inverse, the Slayer. Her spells and background are based on the character of the same name in the Anime series Slayers.
  • Vega Strike has its lightsome "Space Is A Harsh Mistress" gameover screen [dead link] [2]. Rlaan bio-fuel is named "Chitty-chitty-boom-boom", there's "Tritanium armor" and Industrial Gems include "Dilithium telluride" ("a desired item among the religious fanatics of the trekkie religion"). There's also a mention of Snowden (in the description of heavy flak).
  • In Civilization IV, the loading screen music is the opening music from Colonization, another game by Sid Meier.
  • Wild ARMs 5 consists of many shout outs to the previous Wild ARMs games including NPC cameos of the previous heroes, alternative costumes for the party members that resemble outfits of the previous heroes (one of them being the most powerful armor in the game for Dean), and the occasional quote from those NPC cameos that reference to their adventures in the previous games (like the Virginia cameo making a reference to meeting Maya Schrodinger, her constant rival in Wild ARMs 3, when you give her a Golden Angel).
    • And in a non-Wild ARMs reference, the Memory Bird in Harmonde gives a parody that many Castlevania: Symphony of the Night players will surely recognize:

Memory Bird: What is greed? A miserable pile of selfishness! But enough talk...

  • The Shin Megami Tensei game Raidou Kuzunoha vs. the Soulless Army has a homeless NPC that you can encounter in Episode 2 early on. After you bribe the Lucky Charm out of his hands, you can read his mind again to reveal him saying "You all assume I'm safe here in my hood, unless I try to start again." This is a shout out to Linkin Park's song, Breaking the Habit.
    • And also in Chapter 2, Oboroguruma, a ghost car that appears at the Full moon, says this:
  • In the Tsukihime "sequel" Kagetsu Tohya, there is a shoutout to the boxing manga/anime Hajime no Ippo. For comedy purposes Ciel uses a fighting style she calls "The Hitman Style" and assumes a stance similar to that of Mashiba Ryo, the character who uses that style in Hajime no Ippo. This is a reference to this manga because Thomas "Hitman" Hearns, the real-life boxer who this style was based on, did not call his style "the Hitman Style."
    • Arc, in her cat form, counters this by avoiding the punches in an "oddly familiar circular motion", a reference to Ippo's "Dempsey Roll" and peek-a-boo style.
  • In Final Fantasy VII, a boy in the slums pretends to be a train operator, obliviously not realizing that he's in Midgar, and it's not as clean as he'd hoped; this is an obscure reference to Akira Kurosawa's film Dodesukaden.
  • In probably one of the most bizarre cameos ever, the Sega Genesis game Revenge of Shinobi features a boss fight with...Spider-Man. And when you defeat him, he turns into...Batman. ...watch this video.
  • Doom II has a secret level which is basically lifted right out of id software's previous FPS, Wolfenstein 3D. If you dig deeper, you can find a secret room where you must gib four strung-up Commander Keens to progress.
  • Discworld Noir is mostly a big Homage to Film Noir, but includes a few Shout Outs to other things including Doctor Who ( Satrap's big villain speech is a fairly direct lift of Davros's in "Genesis of the Daleks") and other video games ("They'd hidden in a wine barrel. Now why did that make me think of the phrases 'You wait. Time passes.' and 'Thorin sits down and begins singing about gold'?" - the two phrases coming from the "hiding in wine barrels" scene in the Interactive Fiction version of The Hobbit.)
  • RuneScape. The Shooting Star minigame is where you try to mine through a fallen star to help the Star Sprite inside. It looks surprisingly like a Teletubby, which most players refer to them as. I mean, it's a tiny, giggling, teletubby-shaped thing. You see what I mean?
  • The Age of Empires clone Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds features the Imperial basic troops (unsurprisingly, stormtroopers) announcing "THX 1138 ready, sir."
  • Freeware puzzle game TAG: The Power of Paint features a neat Shout-Out. In the game, different color paints give you different powers when you walk over them. And red paint makes you go faster.
  • In the opening cinematic of Cortex Command, in one panel that shows the various alien creatures that humans have met, one on the edge is very obviously a Spathi.
  • The Glider series has a few references to The Wizard of Oz. Glider PRO, with its Art Nouveau aesthetic, also alluded to Little Nemo in the name "Slumberland" for the principal game scenario and the name "NEMO" on the mailboxes.
  • Victoria: An Empire Under The Sun features many Shout outs. Most are historical in nature, but some random events reference movies. Most notably several "Lose X of random resource" events, for instance, losing Precious Metal has the acceptance button display the text "My preciousss!" and cotton has "Frankly, I don't give a damn."
  • Might and Magic is also full of these: The Mandate of Heaven for instance, had the priestess in the Castle Ironfist temple bless you with "Live Long and Prosper!"
    • In the second Might and Magic, there was a Lord Peabody who offered your party use of a Time Machine if you went out and retrieved his "boy," a Paladin named Sherman. Most of the hireling names were jokes of some kind, and one of the "portal" services was operated by a fellow named Jean-Luc, who offered to "beam you" to another town.
  • Many of the quest names in Final Fantasy Tactics A2 are such (contrasting the first game's bland names) including It's a trap, A paw Full of Feathers, It's a Secret to Everybody and Lands of Loar (Lands of Lore).
  • G-Darius, of the Darius side-scrolling scifi spaceship-shooter series, is intentionally an anagram of Gradius according to some sources.
  • The acronym for the titular unit of Tom Clancy's H.A.W.X may be evocative of HAWC from the novels of Dale Brown.
  • Spider-Man: Web of Shadows features Spidey remarking, "You know what? Chicken butt," at least if you're running it on PSP.
    • Speaking of Spider-Man game shout outs; in the game based upon the second movie, aside from having the usual shout outs to Spider-Man and the Marvel Universe in general, the game also includes a considerably more subtle shout out to a completely different work. The shout out comes in the form of a random piece of dialogue you might hear from some thugs on the street.

"The timer is a lie!"

Scientist 1: "Have you seen Doctor Freeman?"
Scientist 2: "I think he went to fetch another crowbar..."

  • Some of Thunder Force V's bosses are named after bands: for instance, Deep Purple for Stage 1, and Iron Maiden for Stage 2.
  • In The Beatles: Rock Band, playing "Yellow Submarine" leads to a shout out to the movie of the same name. The band wears the same outfits as they did in the film, and the submarine itself is very similar to the one in the movie.
    • Playing "I Am the Walrus" leads to a shout out to the sequence with the song in the Magical Mystery Tour film.
  • Speaking of The Beatles, you can find a Yellow Submarine in Ricco Harbor from Super Mario Sunshine.
  • Beating the campaign in Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine nets you the achievement Here, at the End of All Things.
  • Jade Empire has a shout out to Knights of the Old Republic, another of Bioware's games. In Jade Empire, the recruiter at the arena remarks something along the lines of "you are indeed mysterious, stranger." In KOTOR, Mysterious Stranger was the codename given to the player character when (s)he participates in the Duel Ring.
  • Knights of the Old Republic has a few of its own. The most obvious one is Bastila, who is a slightly more developed version of Aribeth from an earlier BioWare game.
    • "Canderous" was also the name of a minor NPC in Castlekeep.
    • The Wookie seems quite similar to Chewie, swears a lifedebt to your character, and travels with a "scoundrel." (Though, unlike Han, Mission is a sweet-natured teenaged girl).
    • And there are a ridiculous amount of references to the movies. From the opening shot of the Endar Spire under attack (shades of the Tantive IV) to the Star Forge (the final Boss battle area was inspired by the Throne Room in ROTJ). In the second game, the Exile can point out that lying is still lying, even if it's "from a certain point of view". When rescuing Bastila, one dialogue option is "My name is <Fullname>, and I'm here to save you!" (A recreation of Luke's line to Leia). During torture, you're also given the option to say "Alderaan. It's on Alderaan" - a direct reversal of Leia's stall tactic of "Dantooine. It's on Dantooine!"
      • You also have the option to call Zaalbar a "walking carpet" when you meet him (a reference to Leia's dismissal of Chewbacca).
      • In the second game, you can say "Maybe you'd like it back in your cell?" when Atton complains about your rescue attempt (reference to Han's reaction to Leia complaining about their lack of planning), and if you beat the game as a light-side and then as a dark-side character you get an easter egg in which Atton asks a female character "Are you an angel? No, that's the worst line I've ever used. Hope some poor kid doesn't start using it," doubling as a Take That to Anakin's awkward introduction to Padme in episode 1.
  • Someone on the localization team for Fossil Fighters liked silly Internet memes. In addition to one NPC wondering what the worth of a man's life is ("...guarding a miserable pile of secrets?"), another gets in a "DO NOT WANT."
  • Scribblenauts. How about the level where you must navigate a sunken city, beat down a giant in a diving helmet, and refrain from harming the syringe-holding "smaller sister"?
  • Final Fantasy Tactics features two characters named Wiegraf (Wiglaf) and Beowulf, obvious references to the poem Beowulf. The two FF characters have no connection however, other than the fact that Beowulf (the FF character) is a Palette Swap of Wiegraf.
    • Final Fantasy Tactics A2 has the "kings", five wizards with (horribly Anglicized) French names for the five colors of magic: Ruuj (red), Bliu (blue), Verre (green), Nware (black), and Blanch (white). While we're here, those are also the three colors in Magic: The Gathering, though they have different meanings there. (For starters, red magic in M:TG is what black magic is in Final Fantasy.)
  • The graphical roguelike Elona features as a potential player class, the Claymore: a mostly-female Half-Human Hybrid with silver eyes and inhuman dodging capabilities, with the ability to heal quickly (but at a price).
  • The earlier Touhou games seem to have a number of shout outs to Agatha Christie's novels, including music tracks named "U.N.Owen was her?" and "Who done it?", a spellcard named "And then there were none?", and a character whose last name is Margatroid, who is based on a character from A Murder is Announced. There are also several references to Fist of the North Star, such as Reimu's Fantasy Haven (several times), and several basic attacks in Hisoutensoku, and the Red Stone of Aja from JoJo's Bizarre Adventure.
  • The Redwings from Final Fantasy Tactics Advance is the shout out for Final Fantasy IV's Red Wings. The Redwings' leader Grissom is a Dark Knight, but his sprite and attacks are based on a Paladin. This is a shout out to the Red Wings' leader Cecil Harvey.
  • The Bit.Trip series has several:
    • The second boss of Beat is pretty much a sideways version of Breakout.
    • The second boss battle in Core is a direct Shout-Out to Missile Command. You have to use your laser to zap the "missiles" (Bits) before they reach the cities below.
    • The bonus stages in Runner are designed similarly to Pitfall, where Commander Video has to run through a jungle collecting bars of gold while avoiding unattended campfires.
  • The corn in Makai Kingdom speaks in a very British accent, and when you try to take over the vegetable world, the corn leader of the rebellion tells you he "thought we were an autonomous collective." After you succeed, he'll tell you that "now we see the violence inherent in the system."
  • In the newspaper article after one particular level in Hitman: Blood Money, the police chief investigating the murders caused by Agent 47 is named Police Chief Wiggum.
  • The blitz entry for Sabin's Aura Bolt/Aura Cannon in Final Fantasy VI is identical to the combo for Hadouken. The similarity is even more noticeable when you consider that the blitz is a blast of light energy fired out of Sabin's hands.
  • The final stage of The Astyanax is a Xenomorph hive from Alien, and the boss, of course, is the Queen.
  • One of the bosses of Journey To Silius resembles the Space Jockey pilot from Alien. And since the game was a dolled-up version of a cancelled Terminator game, the Final Boss is a Terminator endoskeleton.
  • A few of the fighters appearing in the original Killer Instinct were reminiscent of characters from other works, like skeleton warrior Spinal coming right out of Jason and the Argonauts, werewolf Sabrewulf being loosely based on a character of the same name also from a Rare game, or the resident alien Glacius sporting the Shapeshifting abilities of the T-1000.
    • There also is Eyedol's parodic ending, in which a woman in purple approaches him claiming that he's her long lost son Billy, lost in a car incident, and that she gave him his bracelets for his birthday-mirroring exactly the epilogue of Blanka in SFII. Minus the last scene...
      • Which is a double Shout-Out, if you realize that his "full name" would then be Billy Eyedol. Sounds familiar?
  • The Worldbuilder game Bug Hunt is an homage to the original Alien movie. Scientist gets Face Full of Alien Wingwong, Chest Burster hatches, and causes havoc around the space station.
  • In the Bad Ending of It Came from the Desert: after the nuke destroys Lovelock, the radio announcer asks: "Is anybody there? Anybody at all"? (The Day After). Also, the town's name may be a reference to James Lovelock.
  • In Assassin's Creed II, Ezio's uncle Mario introduces himself with a cheerful "It's-a me! Mario!"
    • A more subtle Batman Shout-Out in the game: When you are climbing walls and leaping across buildings you occasionally hear a bystander say: "Another capering crusader."
  • Absolutely everything by Artix Entertainment has bucketloads of shout-outs; between Adventure Quest, Dragon Fable, Mechquest, and Adventure Quest Worlds, it'd probably be easier to list the series they don't reference, especially when it comes to sci-fi, fantasy, video games, and Shonen anime.
  • EarthBound makes tons of references to the Beatles, the most notable one being the yellow submarine.
    • Heck not just the beatles the entire Mother series has shout outs to a lot of old pop culture such as The Runaway Five being a reference to the Blues Brothers which was so obvious they were changed for the American translation, and theres also a reference to the Barrett strong song (Money thats what I want) as well as tons of other old pop culture and movie references throughout the entire series also it is natural for it to have tons of Beatles references as Itoi is a huge fan of The Beatles.
  • Backyard Sports. Oh, where to start. Reese Worthington makes tons of Star Wars references, Dmitri Petrovich talks about many computer languages, and Sunny Day has a Putt-Putt watch. There are many more, too many to fit on this page.
  • A "Create Gold" spell in Dungeon Keeper 2 is cast with an incantation "Expressus Americanus".
  • Half Life: Opposing Force has a lot of fun with these. The Drill Sergeant Nasty in the training mission barks lines from Full Metal Jacket. The wisecracking soldiers riding in the chopper with you at the start of the game quote a line or two from Aliens. And later in the game, there's a puzzle where you have to activate a gearbox and open a valve, referencing Valve Corporation (developers of Half Life) and Gearbox Software (creators of Opposing Force).
  • In Ys: The Ark of Napishtim, the priestess Olha's name may be a reference to Arha, a character from the Earthsea Trilogy who is also a priestess. And both stories take place on islands. Also, the Ark resembles The Monolith from 2001: A Space Odyssey.
  • In DJMAX Portable Clazziquai Edition, one of the clubs in Club Tour mode has courses titled "Harder", "Better", "Faster", and "Stronger".
  • The Jak and Daxter series has a few Shout Outs to Crash Bandicoot and Ratchet and Clank. TLF alone had shout outs to Star FOX, Mystery Science Theater 3000, Diablo, and Planet of the Apes.
    • Don't forget Dr. Strangelove, with Daxter referring to "missile hat an' spurs".
  • Bayonetta contains several Shout Outs to Sega's older games. One of the special attacks Bayonetta can learn is the tetsuzanko, a body-check attack favored by Akira Yuki of Virtua Fighter. If she finishes a Verse with it and also gets a Pure Platinum ranking for it, she'll also quote Akira's "You're 10 years too early!" winquote in Japanese.
    • During the driving scene in the prologue, Enzo's car stereo is briefly tuned to "Magical Sound Shower" (a song from the arcade racing game OutRun).
    • The first two sections of Chapter XIV are almost direct recreations of levels from Space Harrier, and the achievement/trophy you get for completing them with platinum medals is called "Fire the Afterburners!"
    • Rodin, the merchant at the Gates of Hell, also gives a nod to Resident Evil 4's merchant with this line:

"Hey, check this out...'What're ya buyin'?' Heard that in a game once..."

    • Rodin also commented that he always wanted to be a bald space marine, which is a shout out to...something—that's not exactly the most specific description.
    • It has some references to some of the series and games the developers at Platinum Games—former employees of Capcom and Clover Studios—worked on. For instance, when rattling off a list of his girlfriends, Luka mentions Claire, Trish, Sylvia, and Ammy. He has lipstick on his face in a pattern resembling Amaterasu's markings at the time, as well.
      • Sometimes, when you visit Rodin, he'll say, "Whatever it is you want, I'm not putting a chainsaw on your arm, got it?" a nod to chainsaw-armed protagonist Jack Cayman from MadWorld.
    • Bayonetta's Panther form and Jeanne's Lynx form sprouts flowers as she runs, like Ammy.
    • The only legal tender accepted at the Gates of Hell are small golden rings.
  • Shadow Warrior also has a few, including:
    • A strung-up Lara Croft.

Lo Wang: She's raided her last tomb!

    • A tomb, presumably belonging to Jackie Chan, if Lo Wang's remark is anything to go by.
    • Pick up a second Uzi and Lo Wang will say "Be proud, Mister Woo."
  • MadWorld has a few regarding Clover's previous title God Hand, notably the way you dispose of the vampire lady (awesome rack on her, though) ,as you spank her just like the female minions from that game. The final fight against the Black Baron is also chock full of references to the battles between Gene and Azel.
  • Tetris the Grand Master had a Licensed Game spinoff based on Cardcaptor Sakura. The goal in that game was to clear seven jeweled blocks rather than make lines. This objective was adapted into a game mode in the latest game in the series, Tetris: The Grand Master 3 - Terror-Instinct. Heboris, a fan clone of TGM, features a similar mode called Tomoyo.
  • Chrono Trigger has a blonde cavewoman named Ayla, a Captain Ersatz of the main character of The Clan of the Cave Bear.
  • The first game in Bubble Bobble series does shout outs in all directions.
  • An in-game newspaper in Fret Nice talks about the new hit band "Grinning Colossus".
  • In Dragon Age, there are two NPCs of varied plot importance named "Lloyd" and "Irving".
  • In Duke Nukem: Zero Hour's first Post-Apocalypse level, Duke starts out in front of the half-buried Statue of Liberty, and says "Damn you, damn you all".
  • Master of Orion 2 has almost too many to count, most of it in its tech tree. You can research, among other things, Phasors (ship and handheld), Disruptor Cannons, transporters, Doom Stars (with optional planet-destroying superweapon), and an adamantium armor.
  • The Zeppelin in Ninja Gaiden Xbox heavily resembles the Hindenburg, and goes down in flames in a similar manner. "Oh, the humanity!"
  • Freebie MMO Rappelz had many NPCs in the first area directly named after characters from the Ogre Battle strategy RPG series. (At least in the english version.)
  • Cave Story Wii Ware changed a few things in the translation. One can't help but think of the Kool-Aid Man when Balrog shows up for any reason at all. The first time he shows up (through the Shack door), think of Balrog speaking in the Kool-Aid Man's voice for cheap, yet instant lulz.

"Oh yeahhh!"

  • In the first chapter of Final Fantasy XIII, Sazh (the Token Minority) quotes Lethal Weapon by saying "I'm too old for this (shit)". Although this may have been unintentional, it is still awesome.
  • In Olivia's second Story Mode path in Battle Fantasia, she encounters a mysterious stranger who calls himself the "Romance Knight" (who is actually a masked Ashley), who's basically a walking shout-out to Tuxedo Kamen from Sailor Moon. He tosses a single rose at his opponent, signaling his arrival, and then gives a short speech about love and devotion before disappearing.
  • One system in EVE Online contains a massive black monolith.
  • Wii Sports Resort features Swordplay Champion Matt. Between his Samuel L. Jackson-esque appearance and the fact he wields a violet sword when they usually come in red or blue, the Mace Windu parallel is pretty obvious.
  • The Mooks in the Village level of Wonder Boy III: Monster Lair look like the Toadstool people from the Super Mario Bros. universe, and the stage boss is a King Mook version. They were also in Wonder Boy in Monster Land.
  • Emma, the DJ from Barrow Hill, is an obvious, albeit younger, Shout-Out to Stevie, the female DJ from John Carpenter's The Fog.
  • When the player is doing well while playing as Han Solo in Star Wars Battlefront II, an enemy stormtrooper will occasionally exclaim, "Hey! Solo shot first! That's not fair!", a clear reference to Han's confrontation with Greedo at Mos Eisley in the original Star Wars movie.
  • A subtle one: at one point in Lost Planet 2, you have to fend off a giant (nearly) invincible Sand Worm type creature in a desert. It has scurrying legs at its front that are suspiciously identical to those possessed by the Ohmu from Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind—similarly invincible insect creatures inhabiting an Earth that's largely desert.
  • Alan Wake has a number of these, many from Alan's agent, Barry. If you turn the lights off in the cabin, Barry complains about the threat of being "eaten by a grue".
    • A running gag of shout outs lightens the mood of the game with "Night Springs," a TV series that is halfway between an Homage and Take That for The Twilight Zone. The episodes, which feature an overly philosophical narrator, become increasingly ridiculous until they are practically open mockery of the original series (one particularly moronic episode starts with the narrator saying "Are we men dreaming of being butterflies, or butterflies dreaming of being men?").
  • In FEAR, the office building has a couple of shout-outs to Office Space - namely Milton's trademarked Red Stapler (no Swingline label, though), and TPS Reports scattered on the floor.
  • In Half Life 2, one of the rebels is named Winston, possibly in reference to Winston Smith, protagonist of Nineteen Eighty-Four, from which the game gets a lot of its influence.
  • An early quest chain in Grand Fantasia takes place on "The Lonely Island", and the victory message you get after you complete it reads "I'm on a Boat!"
  • A downright bizarre case of one: The hidden object game Cate West: The Vanishing Files has a good number of the street names named after characters from Monster, including a Tenma Street, apparently to drive the point home that it's not just generic European names. Now, how many people who play hidden object games do you think are going to get a reference like that?
  • The Space Elevator in Syndicate Wars is placed in Sri Lanka. This is also home of Arthur C. Clarke, who popularised the idea in fiction.
  • In Sim Earth, you can advance the evolution of a species with a square black Monolith
  • StarTropics has a Moai head as a boss in one of its later levels.
  • Seeing as how Transformers: War for Cybertron is basically High Moon Studio's love letter to the childhoods of boys who grew up in The80s, the whole game runs on Shout Outs to the Transformers universe. What isn't a blatant re-purposing of content from other continuities is simply Pragmatic Adaptation: turning Megatron's alt mode from a pistol to a tank is one of them. Clearer examples are often used for the names of achievements. For example, if you kill two snipers within 5 seconds of each other, you are rewarded with the achievement "Targetmaster." [4] Props go out to the boss battle with Soundwave during the Autobot half of the Campaign mode. After the player hasn't seen hide nor hair of Rumble, Frenzy, or Laserbeak during the three missions where you can play as Soundwave, and possibly a mild Shout Out in his possession of the Sentry ability, he produces all three during the boss encounter, and are in fact integral to defeating the monotone fiend.
    • The entire game is basically a re-imaging of the backstory to G1, with a TV series following up on it planned. It has shout-outs to every other Western Transformers thrown in for good measure. Actually explaining how Starscream went from a scientist and friend of Jetfire to a treacherous Decepticon is a nice touch.
  • In Contra Rebirth, one of the unlockable characters you can obtain is a reptile named Plissken.
  • Freeware Game Iji references Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind with one of the final boss' attacks, the game being inspired by the movie.
    • The Scrambler will occasionally insert "mah boi" into sentences. Yes, Daniel Remar, the last person you'd expect to like YouTube Poop, made a YouTube Poop reference.
  • In Endless Ocean: Blue World, after befriending the Pacific White-Sided Dolphin, the narration says "You caught the wild Pacific white-sided dolphin! Give it a nickname..? What? Wrong game? Oh.
  • In the Bionic Commando remake, one can find a Tricell billboard.
    • There's also a billboard with a Servbot.
  • In Wanderers from Ys, the corridor leading up to the Lava Zone boss has lava waves that act just like the prominences in Salamander/Life Force's third stage, as well as fire birds. Also, the music sounds similar to that of Salamanders first stage.
  • F.E.A.R. 2 had a few shout-outs to various Internet phenomena and other forms of media, such as:
    • A reference to the infamous Onyxia Wipe animation on a computer console.
    • "Two Beans One Cup Latte" on a menu at a cafe—a reference, of course, to the coprophiliac, uh, "classic," Two Girls One Cup.
  • Left 4 Dead makes a very direct reference to one of the achievements from fellow zombie-butchering game Dead Rising. Dead Rising has the "Zombie Genocider" achievement for gamers that kill 53,594 zombies in a single run through the game. Left 4 Dead has the "Zombie Genocidist" achievement for players killing a total of 53,595 zombies in their lifetime.
    • Ellis makes a reference to Life Alert, of all things, when he hangs on a ledge:

Ellis: "Help! I seem to have fallen! ...And no, I can't get back up!"

  • The Level 13 boss in Wonder Boy III: Monster Lair is a Cyber Cyclops knight that looks like a Cylon Centurion, complete with the oscillating red eye.
  • At one point in Ys Seven, an NPC at the tavern is trying to remember the name of the flower girl Tia...but all his guesses instead resemble the name of a different, rather famous video game flower girl.
  • Descent II has green homing missile-launching robots called Lou Guards (which are also expies of the Super Hulks from the first game), a possible reference to Lou Ferrigno of The Incredible Hulk fame. Also, one of the later levels is named "Drec'nilbie K'luh".
  • In Space Quest VI, the endodroid subplot is a reference to Terminator 2. Lick the wallpaper in the elevator, and Roger will say, "The snozzberries taste like snozzberries!" Talk to the elevator door, and the narrator will reply in the whiny voice of Cedric from King's Quest V. There are also references to Star Wars and Alien, among other things.
    • The intro of the VGA remake of Space Quest I, where the Arcada is captured by the Deltaur, is a shoutout to the opening of Star Wars a New Hope.
    • The landing platform on Labion looks like the Endor landing platform from Return of the Jedi.
    • Another Terminator reference is Arnoid the Annihilator in SQ 3.
    • The Energizer Bunny makes an appearance in the starting area of SQ 4.
    • The series as a whole is so full of these, it should have its own page.
  • A rather NSFW one : the eroge Schoolmate 2 has a scene where the female protagonist (or rather one of the ghosts that's possessing her) finds a vibrator that she'll soon...Hum...put to good use. She warns you of her discovery by lifting the vibrator up to the air while singing "Ta da da daaaa!!!".
  • In Trinity Universe, there's an optional event where Kanata and his friends run into Recit after he goes on a rash of cash register vandalism. Recit immediately admits to being responsible, which disappoints the Prinny, who expected to engage in a battle of wits where Kanata would "use logic, deduce, and present evidence" to incriminate him.

Prinny: "Take that, dood!"
Pamela: "Objection!"

  • One line in The Lost Crown: A Ghost-Hunting Adventure is a Title Drop for the MR James work, A Warning To The Curious, that provided much of the inspiration for the game's storyline.
  • The first motorcycle level in Tomb Raider: Legend is a shoutout to the ending of Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
  • In Civilization V, the achievement for destroying an enemy unit in one turn is called It's Super Effective.
  • In Lands of Lore, when you examine a random bush, you get a response: "Is that a Pseudobushia Hugiflora?" Pseudobushia Hugiflora is a talking plant you have to grow in The Legend of Kyrandia. (Both games were made by Westwood Studios.)
    • Likewise, both in Lands of Lore and Legend of Kyrandia you can find a "Piscata Rosea" item.
  • Hamtaro Ham Ham Heartbreak has the character search the world for three coloured marbles and insert them into a pedestal in a triangular fashion so you can pull a legendary "weapon" from a stone, whilst a familiar chest-opening score plays...
  • The Adult Swim.com original game House of Dead Ninjas is a Retraux affair designed to resemble an early NES game - and even comes with a manual. The first enemy profiled, Niji, is described as "a Pretty Cool Guy" who runs straight ahead "and doesn't afraid of anything," which may be more memetic than referential. But then it says he likes to pretend he's a girl and calls himself "Ninjetta" - a reference to Birdo's profile in the original Super Mario Bros. 2 manual. Most of the enemies are based on classic Mario or Zelda enemies; the stone-faced crusher Gror is basically a Thwomp, while Magicloke is a Wizzrobe (note the name).
  • The first phase of the boss of Raiden IV's second stage looks and behaves similarly to the stage 2 boss of Don Pachi, while the third boss, which consists of multiple ships that first attack separately then combine, was apparently inspired by the third boss of Konami's old Raiden clone Lightning Fighters.
  • In the old Mac game Capn' Magneto, the wizard in the Shrine is named "? (The Mysterian)", a reference to the band ? and the Mysterians.
  • In Marvel Ultimate Alliance, the Murderworld mini-games are classic videogames. Pitfall is even named.
  • Action Doom 2 Urban Brawl has plenty of these. Copy-pasting from its work page:
  • In Outlaw's ending of Twisted Metal: Head On, Carl accidentally wishes for Jamie to "shut up", and her mouth fuses shut in the same manner as Neo's in The Matrix.
  • The three episodes of Secret Agent are named "The Hunt For Red Rock Rover" (the RRR being the McGuffin you're after in this episode), "Kill Again Island" and "Dr. No Body".
  • In The 7th Guest, Stauf's "welcome to my house" speech seems to be a reference to The Legend of Hell House.
  • There is one in the trophy list in Arcana Heart 3 to, of all things, Saturday Night Live's Celebrity Jeopardy! skits. Using four different sword techniques in a single match while playing as Kamui will net you a trophy called "That's 'S' Words, Mr. Connery!"
  • In Nie R, the hero is asked to save a prince from a forbidden shrine who is searching for his mask. When the prince is found and he finds his mask, the screen goes letter box as the camera gives a slight bird's eye-view of the prince, his mask spinning in midair a little bit over his outstretched hand. This perfectly mirrors "Item Found" cutscenes of the 3D Zelda games. It also comes complete with a Suspiciously Similar Song version of the Zelda fanfare.
  • The Re-Volt RC car driving game has two tracks called "Toys in the Hood", set in peaceful suburbs.
  • DEFCON is largely inspired by the NORAD screens in WarGames, so scrolling text in the lobby screen includes the list of games from the movie ("FALKEN'S MAZE, BLACK JACK, GIN RUMMY...THEATERWIDE BIOTOXIC AND CHEMICAL WARFARE, GLOBAL THERMONUCLEAR WAR") and "How about a nice game of chess?"
  • Oh boy, 9-volt and 18-volt in Warioware is simply DROWNING in this section!
  • When you clear a mission in Buddy Rush, there's a chance your helpers will compliment you by calling you "Magic Hands". In a earlier version of the game, they actually called you "God Hand". Also, a ruins-themed chapter has items related to Indiana Jones (whip, hat and Holy Grail) and a mushroom item obviously has a description that alludes to Super Mario Bros.
  • Fate/hollow ataraxia has some shoutouts to other works in the Nasuverse. For example, there's a lampshade hanging of how Tohsaka is pretty clearly an expy of Tohno Akiha, though it isn't stated outright. There are also two new movies playing, both of them nonsensical. They're called NEKOARC and TIGERDOJO. In allcaps.
  • Summon Night Swordscraft Story has standard Mythology Gag's to the main series, but Atlus added at least one Shout-Out in it. "I love the knuckle. It's so bad"
  • While Koei have been known to deliberately make internal references and homages in the course of Gundam Musou, it's much more noticeable, and a bit startling, when shout outs like this turn up in a quote from Dynasty Warriors 7 of all things. If it's coincidental (taking 7's 2011 release date into account), it's a heck of a coincidence.
  • A recent update in Final Fantasy XI included a reference to Kyuubey of all things, as the Taru Taru for the limit break quest to get past leve 90 says "Are you ready to sign a Contractaru with me and become a magical g--er, a mightier, more majestic adventurer?" and after you finish the quest, you get the key item "soul gem".
  • The Binding of Isaac has quite a few, aside from its obvious The Legend of Zelda-inspired gameplay.
  • In Minecraft, there is a surprising amount of shout-outs, from the the title screen that gives references by the dozen to placing a picture of king graham.
  • Dragon Slayer II: Xanadu has the Black Onyx and Fire Crystal items, whose names are surely inspired by The Black Onyx, the first successful Japanese RPG, and its sequel The Fire Crystal.
  • In "Super Mario 3D Land", In World 5-2, you see Mario from a topview. If you have a fire flower, sometime in the level, you can light 4 torches, and the familiar "Zelda" jingle that plays whenever you solve a puzzle. In fact, Zelda is turning 25 this year, (2011) another (possibly coincidental) reference to the Zelda series, by means that it's World 5-2, backwards = World 2-5, or 25!
  • Asterix at the Olympic Games has a cutscene where Asterix knocks out a Roman with a headbutt. For a brief moment, the background changes to a soccer field and a referee raises a red card. It's an obvious reference to the infamous incident involving Zinedine Zidane at the 2006 World Cup Final, and may be also a nod to the cameo of Zidane himself in the movie.
  • The "Bunnies helped tame the Wild West" level of Rayman Raving Rabbids has a giant steampunk robot for the end boss, which seems startlingly reminiscent of the climax of the movie Wild Wild West.
  • In Soul Nomad and The World Eaters, when Christophe sends the hero and his/her group off to fight one of the World Eaters, Danette demands to know its special powers and weaknesses:

Gig: "...it can fly at like 5 million miles an hour. It has heat vision, it can breathe super-freezing air, and it can shoot freaking lasers from its eyes. Oh, but it can't see through lead, and it's totally weak to a certain element from its home world."
Danette: "R-really?"
Hero: "No. He just stole that from somewhere."

  • Maji De Watashi Ni Koi Shinasai has numerous ones to other series, such as Gundam or Dragonball.
    • One event in the Visual Novel reveals that Momoyo lost sleep due to spending the night reading one of Yamato's manga collection. The name of the manga? 20th Century Men.
    • The boys are always reading copies of "Jasop", discussing the latest "To-Loverun". Yamato asks Yukie to fetch him a copy of "Sasoday". Note that the "N" character in katakana is very similar to "So" in Japanese.
    • EVERY SINGLE quit-game skit in the Visual Novel is a shout out to something, including other roles played by each character's voice actor/actress. One such simple gag goes as follows

Momoyo: "I'm gonna play the little sister character today!" "Hey brother! Where are you?"
Suguru: "I'm right here! Your elder brother stands before you!"
Momoyo: "Found ya!"*PUNCH*
This skit references these two characters' voice actor/actress' roles in the Zeta Gundam movie compilation.


Back to Shout-Out
  1. Counter-clockwise : Goemon ; Moai Head ; Shiori Fujisaki, and Saki Nijino ; Twinbee ; Takosuke, and Koitsu ; Kewne ; Ebisumaru ; Madoka ; Powerpro-kun ; Alucard ; Tir McDohl ; and Vic Viper. And, as an extra subtle Shout-Out, the things Goemon, Alucard and Tir are riding are the arcs of the Konami Logo.
  2. if something wrong, it's due to JPEG misnamed PNG
  3. That's German for "mammoth".
  4. For those who aren't Transfans, the Targetmasters was a line of toys produced during Generation 1.
  5. The OBEY Giant, meanwhile, was a modified version of a sticker fad starring, you guessed it, André the Giant.
  6. when you run out of hearts, the mushroom restores your health and returns you to the last safe room you entered before you died
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