That One Boss/Action Game/Mega Man

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


You'll wish you just had to fight Air Man after dealing with these guys.

Mega Man stands as a shining example of classic Nintendo Hard. These guys are the reason why. It doesn't matter if you've got the select trick or a folder full of Program advances, these mechanized murder Masters are coming for you.


Mega Man (Classic series)

  • It should be noted that the Mega Man Anniversay Collection features an easy mode that covers the first seven games. The NES games benefit with Mega Man's defensive and specials weapon power being upped by 50%, buster shots do an extra unit of damage, while 7 doubles the power of every weapon. The bosses can still be a pain in the ass though.

Mega Man 1

  • Elec Man is possibly the hardest boss to kill with only your pea shooter in any game. He runs around the arena like he's on crack, throws nearly impossible to dodge Elec Beams at you and can kill you in three hits! Granted he's very weak to the Rolling Cutter (Cutman's weapon), but if you didn't quite figure out that bosses have weaknesses... There are ways to make fighting him easier that involve some rather ingenious AI exploits, but even then they're still easy to screw up and require a cool head and precise timing that you can't deviate from lest he continue his spastic rampage.
  • Fire Man, mainly because his Fire Storm attack is very powerful and you have to have perfect timing to jump over it. Also he spams this move like there's no tomorrow, so even having the Ice Slasher isn't going to guarantee you victory.
  • Ice Man seems simple on paper: he moves around only a little bit while jumping and firing three Ice Slashers in a very easy to memorize pattern that he never deviates from. However, his Ice Slashers are rather large and a bit unwieldly to jump over, and they take away one third of your health should you get hit by one. While Ice Man should avoid this status in theory, the fact he's surprisingly durable and that three mistakes will kill you can make him deceptively tough to beat.
  • The Yellow Devil from Wily Stage 1. An odd change of pace from the game's Robot Masters, Yellow Devil is an enormous blob of yellow goo that is invulnerable for a good deal of the fight thanks to the fact that he's constantly having sections of himself rocket across the boss room at ludicrous speed in hard to dodge patterns. When he forms, you have only a few seconds to shoot his exposed eye before he goes back to his separate and reform attack, and to make things even worse, his eye can spawn in a position that's too high to hit! Many gamers had lost a good chunk of their childhood trying to get past this shining example of Nintendo Hard. Unless they cheated.
    • The worst part about the Gamecube version Anniversary Collection is that the glitch that makes the Yellow Devil easy to beat was drastically changed (the timing was changed to make it less effective if you knew the change, worthless if you didn't), thereby making the fight that much more difficult.
    • Then the Rainbow Devil shows up in Mega Man Zero. It's just as cheap as previous models. It has an especially annoying attack where it bounces around the room, splits into two parts, then into four before finally reforming. It also has a punch attack that crosses nearly half the arena and a projectile attack that makes nearly the entire ground a danger zone. Good times. Thankfully, the redux in Zero 2 is actually somewhat easier.
    • And there was also Dark Moon, the Devil-type boss in Mega Man V for the Gameboy. He's hell to beat with his own weakness, the Photon Missile, and his separation attacks, the top two rows would bounce down in order to try to kill you.

Mega Man 2

  • Air Man, whose hard to dodge tornadoes that deflect your bullets make him an infamous example of this trope.
    • Strangely, this is a reversal of an earlier viewpoint - Air Man used to be considered almost as weak as Bubble Man, and a good boss to start the game on. This may in part be due to the American manual having a walkthrough for his stage.
    • Note that the Japanese original of the game (which spawned this particular bit of Memetic Mutation) only has Hard mode. This means you do half damage to all bosses, and some enemies too. The US version was made easier be default, and Air Man is affected by this. On the US version's Normal difficulty you can damage him much faster than he can damage you, but you actually have to learn to play on the Japanese version (Hard mode in the US). Furthermore, no matter what version you play, one of his tornado patterns cannot be dodged.
  • Quick Man, if not because his stage is That One Level it's because he is incredibly fast (hence the name) and has a completely unpredictable attack pattern that makes fighting him more akin to fighting a spastic chimpanzee, and does almost 1/3 of your life bar with Collision Damage! Oh, and there is an attack that can take half his life in one shot, but odds are you will probably need it to get past the almost impossible laser barrage right before his door! And even then, you're only taking half of his life energy, meaning that you'll still have to do quite a bit of legwork on your own. And to make matters worse? Jumping right into him is easy to do since his boss room consists of raised floors that need to be jumped over to traverse.
  • You'd think that a robot that weaponizes leaves would be pathetic, right? WRONG. Meet Wood Man, whose main method of attacking is shooting a couple of large leaves into the sky and having them descend in hard to dodge patterns. While this is happening, Wood Man generates a Leaf Shield that blocks all methods of attacking before tossing it at you, and its large size makes it tough to safely jump over without the falling leaves nailing you on the head. And he takes a leap at you with every throw of his Leaf Shield, meaning that sooner or later, you're going to have to run underneath him which is risky thanks to his large size and the lack of a sliding mechanic. Thankfully he's a breeze with the Metal Blades or especially the Atomic Fire, but otherwise save this guy for later.
  • The Mecha Dragon in the first Wily Fortress stage, who doesn't do anything too ridiculous but makes up for it with technically being able to kill you in one hit since the recoil from his attacks is enough to knock you off your tiny block platforms and drop you into a bottomless pit. Someone even wrote a blog entry in which this boss fight was compared with a major real-life hangup. Made worse in Anniversary Collection, which removed an exploitable bug to make yourself invincible during the fight.
  • The Boobeam Trap, the turrets with blindingly fast shots from the walls heading straight for you every three seconds or so. It's the other boss in Wily's Fortress that only has one way to damage it. And the kicker? You only have seven uses of the weapon maximum. Five to actually destroy them, and at least one to break barriers blocking the others. If you don't make clever use of Items and/or accidentally miss a shot or two then you will not be able to defeat this boss. And since you don't get energy refills after death you either need to take forever restocking energy off the few enemies or just game over entirely and restart the stage. There's a reason why practically every MM2 romhack out there, even the obscenely hard ones, generally make this boss easier.
  • The second phase of Wily Machine 2 is a real big step up from the pathetic first phase. Basically, the machine fires projectiles that constantly bounce off the ground that can be awkward to dodge at times. This shouldn't be overly hard in theory, but the bouncing shots have incredibly deceptive hitboxes that allow the blasts to hit you even if you aren't even touching them, and they do quite a bit of damage. And whenever he fires them in volleys, you pretty much will be hit because it's literally impossible to dodge them. Even when you hit him with his weakness (Crash Bombs), the battle's outcome is pretty much down to you hopefully doing damage to Wily faster than he does it to you. Sure, he's no Wily Machine 7, but he's still a real hair-puller either way.

Mega Man 3

  • Shadow Man. He always hops a few times, but there's no way to predict if he'll follow up by sliding into you or tossing a few Shadow Blades. Both are not only quick and hard to dodge, but will hit rather hard as well. On top of this, the only weapon that can hit Shadow Man effectively, the Top Spin, has to be used at very close range, and its weapon reserve energy drops like a stone when you are using it while in direct contact with Shadow Man. What tends to happen is that if you try attacking directly with Top Spin, ALL of its weapon power can get drained when you land your first hit. Then Shadow Man still has 75% health and you have no Top Spin power left. Good luck hitting him with the Arm Cannon, and even more so, good luck in having him use a manageable pattern.
  • Needle Man is just as bad, thanks to being a complete and utter spaz thanks to his unpredictable AI. He's deceptively fast for his bulky build, can take a ton of hits before going down, and fires his needles at machinegun speed. Even worse, the Gemini Laser (his weakness) is slow to and easy for Needle Man to dodge, meaning that you're better off just going after him with your buster. Good luck if you're trying to do a no-damage run against him.
  • The Doc Robots take the abilities of ALL the Robot Masters from 2 (You fight two per level, and they make you play through the four harder stages revamped to be harder), but make them much harder to fight thanks to various different factors. If you thought dodging Wood Man's swirling leaves was bad before, try it when they are even larger! Try fighting Crash Man without an attack that can shoot up! TRY FIGHTING A LARGER, FASTER QUICK MAN!
    • Oh, and since it's Mega Man 3, you now have to try and figure out which weapons the Mega Man 2 robots are weak against, all over again. Almost none of them are intuitive either. Further bonus because, even when you do figure out their weakness, they aren't as effective as their weakness was in Mega Man 2 (nothing can break through the Leaf Shield, for example).
    • Bonus points for Doc Wood Man, as the Leaf Shield has both larger leaves and larger shield radius -- large enough that you almost need Rush Coil to get over it (which consequently smacks you into the leaves coming from above).
    • Remember how easy Flash Man was in Mega Man 2? Well, Doc Flash Man is here to remedy that! Thanks to the fact that he's a Doc Robot, he's bulky and tall which makes it harder to jump over him, and uses the Time Stopper much more frequently. His spread shot covers more ground and hits harder, and lets not forget that Doc Flash Man lacks his original counterpart's fragility!
    • As mentioned above, Doc Quick Man for sure. Quick Man was fragile and not too hard hitting, yet still is infamous for being one of the toughest bosses in Mega Man history. Now make Quick Man bigger (and thus harder to dodge), more powerful, and durable while keeping his spastic pattern intact. Uh oh.
  • This game marks the first time that the dreaded Yellow Devil returns. Sure, your new slide ability makes it easier to dodge his body parts when he splits up and reforms, but he makes up for it by attacking you a lot more when his weakpoint is exposed, making it hard to safely hit it. He can also send his sections bouncing across the arena, where they have Hitbox Dissonance out the ass and will hit you even if you clearly dodged them.
  • The Holographic Mega Mans (Yes, that IS their name) in Wily Stage 3 can be easily killed at the start of the stage if you know what you're doing. If you don't however, then good luck finishing the job. While there are three Mega Man clones running around, only one can be hurt and he'll always changes position whenever he and his brethren disappear and reappear. Their vanishing act follows no real pattern, and there's absolutely no way to tell where the damageable clone went outside of you braving their insanely hard to dodge buster shot barrages. Slip up, and you'll be slaughtered remorselessly.

Mega Man 4

  • Bright Man, who's basically a much tougher version of Flash Man from Mega Man 2. Flash Man just ran around and occasionally froze you in place so he could hit you, but Bright Man does the same thing with a much higher AI and is much more aggressive, prone to firing hard to dodge buster shots while leaping at you and dealing surprisingly strong collision damage. Even worse, there's almost no way to tell when he's about to freeze time, and even if you jump to avoid his oncoming attack, he WILL take a flying leap and nail you anyway. May god have mercy on the soul of any poor fool trying to do a perfect run against him.
  • Dive Man, mainly because he's quick and aggressive, and is another boss who takes advantage of Mega Man 4's ridiculous collision damage by forgoing his homing torpedos and simply ramming you with his Psycho Crusher-style body slams. Jumping over him isn't a safe bit because he's scary good at stopping his charge short and catching you on the way down, and having to deal with the floaty water physics while he can zip around unoppossed doesn't help. What's really scary about Dive Man though is that he becomes harder if you use his weakness, because the Skull Barrier is so small that colliding into him with it pretty much means your going to take huge damage in the process. It doesn't help that the Skull Barrier is considered to be the worst shield weapon in the series, and a big part of it is that it's the one shield you can't throw at the enemy.
  • The whale minibosses called Moby in Dive Man's stage can be absolutely irritating to battle thanks to their fast and hard to dodge homing missiles. While their mine attack seems much more manageable, you have to do so while you're being sucked towards them, which also happens to be right towards a pit of one hit kill spikes.
  • The first battle with Wily is absolutely brutal if you don't realize you can pre-detonate the Drill Bomb and explode it to hit Wily's weak spot: any other weapon either does little to no damage and if you don't detonate the drill before it hits the weak spot, it'll just bounce off. He fires a constant barrage of huge fireballs bigger than Mega Man with no discernable pattern. And yes, the weak spot on his machine is just a bit too high to reach with a straight shot at your apex. Pharaoh Shot which can be aimed upwards, doesn't work. If you don't know how to use Drill Bomb properly, you're going to have to self-terminate on that level over and over until you've stockpiled all 9 energy tanks if you want to win.

Mega Man 5

  • For the most part, Mega Man 5 has tons of easy bosses. However, there's still one that is quite tricky, and that's Charge Man. Mainly, Charge Man's difficulty stems from his erratic movements which make it very easy for him to run right into you while you're attempting to jump over him, and his collision damage hurts quite a bit. Then, there's the fact that he's very prone to going berserk by turning red and launching coal into the air, then usually following up by ramming you. He can't be hurt at all during this state, so it's very easy to waste a charged shot on him while also being nailed by all these attacks he's throwing at you at once.
  • The third Dark Man boss is easily the toughest of the Dark Man quartet. His basic attack where he shoots five projectiles that are tough to dodge is bad enough, but then there's the attack where he shoots three ring projectiles at Mega Man. They can be hard to dodge too (especially in close quarters) and if you get hit, you're doomed to be frozen until Dark Man hits you, which he WILL do, and it hurts a lot.
  • Big Pets from Wily Stage 1 first starts as an irritating Puzzle Boss: thanks to the fact that his platform body segments only shoot out if you him, it can be hard for people to predict when he's going to fire them while attacking the smaller enemies he summons. Even when you pick up on the method of hurting him, you still have to get a clean shot on Big Pet's head while small, annoying enemies constantly bombard you, making it harder to do than it should. And keep in mind: if you get hurt while going for a charge shot, you lose the charged effect, and those little pests will do their best to throw you off your game!

Mega Man 6

  • The Power Piston in Mr. X Stage 2, DEAR GOD. This monstrosity is attached to the room's right wall and constantly zooms up and down juuuuust out of range for your buster while it barrages you with bullets. If that wasn't enough, the stupid thing is constantly raining boulders on you from the sky in unpredictable patterns as well, and they do splash damage when they shatter as well! The boulders combined with the bullets make this stupid thing bullet hell, and thanks to its erratic movements and tiny hitbox, it's a complete and utter chore to hit this thing. God have mercy on your soul if you run out of Silver Tomahawk, because the next best thing are charged Mega Buster shots, and if you get hit (which you probably will) you lose the charge!

Mega Man 7

  • Slash Man, who's fast, strong, and can immobilize you with red goo that falls down at random, leaving you with little time to dodge. Even when you bring his weakness, he still spends most of the fight out of your range, so he's still quite likely to rough you up bad.
  • Freeze Man can be tricky thanks to the fact that his icicle attacks can be tricky to read, and his main method of attacking is to leave you a sitting duck by freezing you in place. His rather quick moving speed and somewhat wonky AI don't help matters at all.
  • Guts Man G of Wily Stage 1 is basically Guts Man on steroids. His Super Arm attack now drops a humongous bolder that will likely crush you, then he smacks it into the wall giving you a tiny window for error when it comes to dodging it. He can also charge you with an almost unblockable dash attack and will toss you into the ceiling for extra damage. Add in the fact that he's ludicrously powerful, is sturdy even against his weakness, and a small weakpoint that only takes damage when it feels like doing so, and you've got trouble.
  • The floating oni head HannyaNED of Wily Stage 3. The screen autoscrolls, it has a plethora of hard-to-avoid attacks such as barrages of bombs and Eye Beams, and its weak point is very small and can only be reached by jumping on the missiles that only stay on screen for a fraction of a second.
  • The final boss also fits here. He is definitely overly hard by the standards of final bosses for the Mega Man series. His weakness, the Wild Coil, is (as per the tradition) difficult to hit him with. His main attack is shooting four elementally charged orbs in your direction, then they stop in mid-flight to adjust their path. And they hurt. Fortunately, he's at least damaged by some other, easier to hit with weapons, such as Freeze Cracker. Word of God says that even the developers found this one impossible without E-Tank usage. Even has some Lampshade Hanging, in which Mega Man attempts to kill Dr. Wily following the battle.
    • This battle is so bad that the creators actually used it again as the final battle in Mega Man 8 and significantly lowered the difficulty. When a final boss battle is so tough, that the programmers actually redo it in the next game just to apologize to fans that struggled getting through it initially, it definitely qualifies for That One Boss.

Mega Man 8

  • While none of the Robot Masters are particularly hard if you have their weaknesses (in fact, many of them can be outright stunlocked to death), Astro Man and Aqua Man are a lot more threatening without them.
    • If you don't know how to dodge his Astro Crush stand in the last place you saw him during his pre-attack Teleport Spam, Astro Man's fight becomes a frantic mess where you're having to dodge massive, fast-falling meteors that come crashing down at random. The miniature satellites orbiting his body also tend to absorb shots meant for him, which can make fighting him with his weakness the Homing Sniper even harder since they eat up its ammo. Oh yes, and he's also the boss of That One Level, so have fun with that.
    • Aqua Man's difficulty, on the other hand, stems from his Water Cannon, which takes up the entire screen and can be genuinely impossible to dodge depending on where you're positioned. Its movement patterns are also seemingly randomized if you don't know how it works, leading to a lot of embarrassing deaths at the hands of this obnoxious little guy.
  • There's the first Wily Fortress boss, Atetemino. You can only hit him with the Mega Ball, a weapon that has to bounce off of the wall up to the ceiling at the right angle to hit him. If he doesn't spawn in the corners of the room, hitting him is nearly impossible, as is dodging the barrage of attacks that come from the boxes he summons. It doesn't help that his level is pretty tough to get through as well.

Mega Man 9

  • Tornado Man's got death spikes on the ceiling of his arena, and his strategy revolves around trying to make you jump into them. Every time he uses his Tornado Blow attack, he summons four large, fast moving cyclones that fly up from the bottom of the stage, often in patterns that are hard to react to. The draft created by the attack allows you to jump higher than normal and can assist in helping you clear the tornados... only to kill you if you overshoot your jump and bang your head on the spikes above. It's a precarious, nerve-wracking balancing act that’s hard to pull off, especially since Tornado Blow hits hard itself, and Tornado Man's prone to making huge jumps across his arena to throw off your aim.
  • Concrete Man's a surprisingly agile boss who's prone to suddenly charging across his room with very little warning, and if he traps you with his Concrete Shot, odds are you won't break out in time and will be forced to eat some nasty collision damage. And his Concrete Shot is very hard to avoid, because he fires three concrete blobs at once, and they all travel at an arc.
    • With sufficient knowledge of how his AI works, you can cheese the hell out of him by standing right in front of him, which makes him fire his shots directly into the floor. But chances are you won't figure that out without any prior knowledge, since getting and staying right in the face of an intimidating Lightning Bruiser isn't exactly intuitive.
    • Concrete Man's not the only threat in his stage: his Paozo elephant minibosses will eat unsuspecting players alive. Specifically the second and third ones: Paozo 2 throws his ball in a weird pattern completely unlike the first's, and Paozo 3 has bottomless pits in his room that he can suck you into.
  • What's worse than one Devil? Two of them at the same time. The Twin Devil shoots blobs of goo at you with the Yellow and Green devils doing so at the exact same time. The pattern is actually easier this time, however, but it's balanced out by the core only being vulnerable in the middle of its attack, not afterwards. Inti Creates, you clever bastards... Fortunately, the pause-glitch works on it.
  • While not quite up to the level of the infamous Wily Capsule 7, this game's Wily Machine is a threat in its own right. It's a three stage gauntlet and none of them are particularly easy. The fight starts with you having to shoot its bouncing egg projectiles into its jaw to hurt it, but the eggs' wild bouncing can lead to them exploding harmlessly against its lower body or exploding on you. Phase 2 tasks you with running around the stage in order to lead the Wily Machine into landing on a spot that gives you enough space to dodge its attacks, which are tightly-spaced jets of flame that travel in a swooping arc. And once you're done with that, all that remains is the Wily Capsule which, in grand series' tradition, is annoyingly dodgy and prone to Teleport Spam while throwing out tons of bullets for you to dodge. If you die at any point, you get to do the entire fight all over again!

Mega Man 10

  • There was one character who both inverted this and played this straight depending on the circumstances. I'm talking about Strike Man, who is the easiest robot master to beat with his weakness weapon the Triple Blade, but the hardest to beat if you don't. He's weak to one of the most powerful weapons in the game, so beating him with it is a snap, but the reverse is also true, as without said weapon this guy's a nightmare to face. His weapon can bounce off the wall and he can have multiples of them at once. It doesn't help that he is also very fast, very strong, and the boss of a level who has not one, but two annoying midboss fights. I hope you have his weakness weapon, or a lot of E-Tanks, because if you don't, well good luck dealing with him.
    • If you're using Proto Man, you can at least slide under him when he bounces toward you, unlike Mega Man. This is also a double-edged sword however since Proto Man has half the defense of Mega Man, and therefore takes twice the amount of damage if he gets hit, so hopefully you're good at dodging.
  • Blade Man, mainly because he's like a powered up Shadow Man from Mega Man 3 and even faster and stronger with multiple projectile attacks that are tricky to dodge. He can also negate his weakness weapon the Commando Bomb if he swings and hits it before it can detonate right next to him, and the bomb itself does minimal damage, meaning the shockwaves from the explosion have to hit Blade Man before he jumps to the ceiling or another wall.
  • Pump Man, mainly because he controls the water current on the floor to work against you and make you even slower than you already are which make dodging his attacks almost impossible, especially as Mega Man who can't slide in this version. It doesn't help that he can negate his weakness weapon the Thunder Wool if he times his attack correctly.
  • Solar Man is pretty much impossible without his weakness weapon, the Water Shield mainly because he can absorb the shots from your Mega Buster and shoot a huge burst of energy right back at you when he has enough power. Good luck if you take him on first, especially since his minibosses are just as tough.
  • The Block Devil. Imagine, if you will, an unholy union between the Pico Pico Master (2nd fortress boss from 2) and the Devils' penchant on splitting and reuniting in definite patterns, throwing in a weakpoint that stays on screen only 1/3 of the battle and a bottomless pit that becomes a Kaizo Trap if you happen to defeat the boss standing on/over a purple block. Oh, and his weakness involves one of the most awkward weapons in the series!

Mega Man 11

  • The game really seems to want you to fight Block Man first: he was the first Robot Master to be revealed, his stage was the first to be shown off, and he's really prominent in the game's intro. And he seems easy enough when you fight him... until you knock out about a third of his health, then he pulls the rug out from under your feet by activating his gear change ability. Then with a boost from the Power Gear, he gets a new health bar and becomes a humongous stone monster that puts up a way better fight. His weakpoint is hard to hit, and his attacks are now devastatingly powerful, long-reaching, and come out surprisingly fast. Once you wipe that out, he has a third phase that's admittedly easier, but since you're likely to be pretty banged up from fighting his giant form, he can easily finish you of thanks to how fast his flurry of blocks comes at you. He's a lot easier to beat with his weakness, but since the game is practically begging you to fight him first it's jarring to see him put up this good of a fight for an unofficial first boss. And it doesn't help that the boss he's weak to also qualifies as That One Boss, as does the boss he's weak to...
  • That aforementioned boss, Blast Man, is basically Bomb Man but strong. He's agile as hell, and the bombs he fires take up a good chunk of the screen. He can even fire them while jumping, making them awkward as hell to dodge. And if that wasn't bad enough, when he uses his Power Gear ability they grow HUGE and require damn-near pixel perfect dodging to avoid.
  • He's already the boss of That One Level, but Torch Man doesn't show you any mercy. His basic attack is fireballs that absorb your shots, but his deadliest attacks revolve around martial arts: he can suddenly dash forward with little warning and kick you across the screen or jump into the air and launch himself at you with a brutally fast divekick, and both attacks have ridiculous knockback that can ruin your flow. And while his Power Gear (noticing a pattern yet?) boosted flame wheels are slow and predictable, they're so big that jumping over them is no easy feat. Overall, this guy's a real pain in the ass, and it doesn't help that he can lure you into a false sense of security by sticking to a pattern, only to break it by dive kicking you in the face. Grr...
  • Guess who's back?! The Yellow Devil, and he's the boss of the first Wily stage again! He actually has the exact same attack pattern as he did in Mega Man 1 meaning that veterans will be able to dodge his notoriously fast body segments when he splits up and reforms, but even they'll be thrown for a loop when he activates his Speed Gear. Suddenly, he splits into nine tiny devils that rocket around the screen like they're on crack in tough-to-dodge patterns. The collision damage he deals is nasty, and it doesn't help that it's tough to hit him with his weakness, the Chain Blast, due to how slow it is and how briefly his weak point is exposed.

Mega Man and Bass

  • This game is notorious for Dynamo Man, who likes to hop into a recharging rig in mid-battle. By the time you break it, he'll have regained at least a third of his HP (and he'll happily refill completely if you take long enough).
  • Just as bad as Dynamo Man is Burner Man, who resides at the end of That One Level, and has several attacks that deal a lot of damage as well as one that holds you in place as he has his way with you. His Wave Burner is also capable of deflecting shots, and he likes to back you into a corner with it. Fighting him with his weakness, Cold Man's Ice Wall, he becomes somewhat of a Puzzle Boss, having to use the Wall to push him into the spikes on either side of his arena. Thing is, there are only certain frames that he's vulnerable to this, any other time and he'll bust right through it, and you've wasted your ammo. If you mess up too many times, it's easy to run out of ammo, and be forced to go through his agonizing stage all over again.
  • The second boss fight of the second fortress stage. It's above a bottomless pit, you have to navigate randomly appearing platforms that the boss can destroy, one of his attacks will blind the screen, and is just a pain overall. You will fall into a bottomless pit and die multiple times even if you utilize a few weapons based tricks to stay in the air and/or keep damaging it.

Mega Man: Dr. Wily's Revenge

  • Remember Cut Man, the easiest boss from Mega Man 1 and that game's Warmup Boss? Well he's back, but he's not the wimp he once was. The Mega Buster only deals one damage against him now and doesn't make him flinch, which is bad since he loves to get in your face and push you around with collision damage, before trapping you between him and the walls of his arena where he's guaranteed to hit you with a point-blank Rolling Cutter. And since Guts Man isn't in this game, he's now weak to the Fire Storm which deals a lot less damage than the Super Arm and doesn't do much to make him easier.
  • Quick Man's back too, and he's as tough as he ever was! He's more predictable than he was in Mega Man 2, but he's even harder to dodge thanks to the smaller arena and like with Cut Man, he takes less damage from the Mega Buster than he did in his home game meaning that even with the Flash Stopper on your side, he's still going to ruin your day in a hurry.

Mega Man II

  • Quite a few examples of this trope from Mega Man 2 and 3 return, but are severely toned down: you can shoot around Air Man's tornadoes and generally outdamage him before he does the same to you, Wood Man can be shot through his shield... but Needle Man's still a pain. Not only are his needles bigger and harder to dodge, but they can block your shots entirely. He'll also spam his head attack if you get too close to him, and the damage adds up fast. He may be weak to the Air Shooter, but you better hope you didn't deplete it in an earlier stage, because weapon ammo is not replenished between the Mega Man 3 boss stages.
  • Surprisingly, Crash/Clash Man is actually tougher than he is in his home game. While he still follows the same "jumps and shoots when you shoot" pattern, sometimes he'll randomly go off-script and shoot you even if you didn't shoot at him. The Air Shooter also does less damage to him than it did in the main game, meaning that missed shots can be costly. Oh, and guess what? You're fighting him in a smaller arena, which gives you less room to dodge him and the explosions from his Crash/Clash Bombs.

Mega Man III

  • If there's any Mega Man Killer that's deserving of their title, it's Punk. For starters, his ludicrous damage output is on par with Ice Man and Elec Man, meaning that he can kill you in three hits. He's also hard to actually hit because he spends most of the battle invulnerable, and the moments where he isn't have him throwing hard-to-dodge Screw Crushers that block your shots. His other attack has him curling up and cannonballing across the room at blinding speed, and depending on the height he launches himself at you either have to jump over him and slide under him. However, because of said blinding speed as well as him having no tells as to how high he'll be when he attacks, dodging him is more or less a coin flip: heads, you dodge, tails, eat shit. Oh, and guess what? He has no weaknesses. Have fun!

Mega Man IV

  • Bright Man manages to be harder than he was in the console version of 4. While you'd have no way of knowing to do so without intricate knowledge of the game's programming, he could only use Flash Stopper if his health reached a certain threshold and careful gunplay could stop him from using it entirely. However, in this version of IV? You have no such luck, and he can use it whenever he wants.

Mega Man V

  • In a game with an otherwise balanced difficulty curve, the final boss Sunstar really brings the pain. Already coming off the heels of a four phase Wily fight, Sunstar himself adds three phases on top of that (on one health bar, thankfully) and proves to be every bit as tough as you'd expect a doomsday weapon to be. His first phase is easily the worst, where his main method of attacking is to blast you with a gigantic laser beam that is awkwardly timed before immediately blitzing you with a charge that requires perfect reflexes to jump over... in an awkward zero gravity environment that neuters your landing speed and thus makes it to where you WILL get ran over if you flub up the timing. He'll also hit you with ground-crawling shots that rocket upwards when they're directly beneath you, and while they're easier to dodge than the laser/dodge combo, the screwy gravity can still trip you up. His second and third phases are mercifully easier but since you'll likely be banged up from earlier, there isn't much room for error there. And if you get a game over against him, guess what? Because the Game Boy Wily stages are all one giant stage, you have go through the Wily Star and its surprise instant kill spike drops, the Mega Man Killer boss rush, Star Droid boss rush, and Wily ALL OVER AGAIN before getting another chance at Sunstar.

Mega Man Powered Up

  • CWU-01P, especially when playing as Rock/Mega. His main way of hurting you is Collision Damage. Sounds easy, right? WRONG! At least on the aptly-named Hard Mode, he's damned fast. And as the aforementioned Joke Character, you can't hurt him without getting right in his face and kicking him enough to first get rid of his bubble shield, then once more to actually cause damage. Oh, and just for good measure, he does also have another attack -- a frickin' laser beam!
  • Also, if you're playing as a Robot Master, when you have to fight the Master who's weapon is strong against you, good luck.
    • Special mention must go to fighting Cut Man as Bomb Man, as all of his attacks can destroy your bombs. In other words, the only way to do any damage to him is to throw a bomb behind him and hope that he doesn't jump away before the bomb explodes. Lather, rinse and repeat 15 more times.
    • Anything with Oil Man.


Mega Man X

Mega Man X

  • Sting Chameleon is a slippery little bastard who spends a lot of time immune to damage by turning invincible, and when he isn't, he's either mercifully shooting you with his easy to dodge Chameleon Sting, trying to nail you with a quick tongue lash, or most likely, dropping nasty spikes on your head that fall fast and in patterns that are tough to dodge. Like with Spark Mandrill, hitting him with his weakness will lock him into a pattern where it's easy to hit him... but said pattern is him constantly doing his spike-dropping attack turning the battle into an easier, yet frantic damage race.
    • Adding insult to injury is that in Maverick Hunter X, he gets an equally obnoxious voice to go along with his already obnoxious fighting style. It's almost as if the devs knew he was annoying to fight and decided to crank things up to 11 by letting him anger struggling players further with his shrill, childish taunting.
  • Armored Armadillo has 3 strategies: guarding, bouncing off the walls at high speed, and shooting his energy shots. He's invincible unless he's shooting at you, but since he usually prefers to just bounce around the room you're likely to spend 90% of his fight frantically dodging an indestructible bouncy ball and hoping you can win his war of attrition. Thankfully the Electric Spark can blow his armor off, but he's still not to be underestimated.
    • Now try fighting him on Maverick Hunter X's Hard Mode, where he picks up an attack where he bounces off the walls and fires off bullets in four directions. Even if you use the Electric Spark to take out his armor, it's still hellish.
    • Heck, try fighting Armored Armadillo WITHOUT Electric Spark. Even a fully charged X-Buster shot won't even scratch him.
  • Launch Octopus. He dishes out homing torpedoes like candy and More Dakka is his trademark. When he's not firing torpedoes at you, he's jumping clear across the arena right on top of you. And to make matters worse, he also has a nasty attack called e-drain where he creates a whirlpool that pulls X into his grasp. Oh, and guess what it does when he grabs you.
  • Boomer Kuwanger is a chore to beat without his weakness weapon, because Teleport Spam is his main strategy. He's annoyingly prone to telefragging you if you so much as set one foot on the ground, and you have maybe a fraction of a second to hit him before he teleports out of the way. You're pretty much forced to hug the wall for 90% of the fight, and in the rare moments where he's vulnerable to your attacks there's still the risk of him blitzing you, grabbing you, and hurling you into the ceiling for massive damage.
  • Since this game is built around the leg upgrade's dash maneuver, a lot of the initial Maverick bosses become so much worse if you choose to fight them before getting it in Chill Penguin's stage. Thought Armored Armadillo or Sting Chameleon was tough already? They're WAY worse when you can't put on a quick burst of speed to dodge their most annoying attacks. Same with Launch Octopus, who's downright nightmarish since his missile spam, jumping, and whirlpool all come out nearly too fast for dash-less X to deal with them (and making matters worse is that a new player is likely to pick him first because the stage select screen opens with his selected). However, several bosses who are normally easy to deal with become a lot tougher when you can't dodge, and they are as follows:
    • Storm Eagle goes from merely a bit tedious to a force to be reckoned with: it's a lot harder to dodge him when he starts randomly divebombing you, and it's even harder to hit him without getting hurt. But the worst part of his fight comes from him trying to blow you off his stage and into the instant-death pits. If you have the dash ability then his wind attacks are a non-issue, but if you don't? Odds are you're gonna be dropped to your doom.
    • Since you get the dash ability and Shotgun Ice together, the infamously pathetic Spark Mandrill becomes a lot more threatening if you fight him before Chill Penguin. Thanks to his AI being unpredictable, you basically have to hope that he'll spam his easily-dodged climb-and-drop attack. Because otherwise, he'll be more than happy to nail you with his blindingly fast punch attack that has zero windup, and have his equally fast Electric Sparks chase you up the walls if you try to stay out of his reach. At least dashing gives you an edge if you have the Shotgun Ice but otherwise choose not to use it, but without it... yeah.
  • The Bospider, due to her incredibly weird fighting style. There are four poles in the middle of her boss room that are periodically connected by randomly generated bridges, and she'll quickly travel the poles and bridges to the bottom of the room where she'll expose her weakpoint before turning invincible and starting over. It sounds simple enough, until you realize that you have barely ANY time to analyze the path she'll take meaning that you'll easily miss her brief moment of invulnerability at best, or have her crash into you for massive damage at worst. Making things worse is that she gets faster and faster as the fight goes on, and she'll also summon Petitpider flunkies to distract you and take blows that were meant for her. To make a long story short, this spider is not easily squished.

Mega Man X2

  • The Silk Shot makes Magna Centipede a joke, but without it? Prepare for trouble. It doesn't look that way thanks to him rarely attacking and his shurikens/Magnet Mines being easy to dodge. But if he nails you with a tail attack, that's where things start going sideways. Each tail attack injects you with a virus that will cut down and limit your abilities with each hit: the first hit disables your charge shot, then the second makes it to where you can only fire one bullet at a time. The third heavily cuts down your dash distance, and the fourth does the same to your jump height. Unless you have him at low health, you're basically already dead if he hits you four times, though even if he only gets you once or twice, the greatly diminished firepower still hurts a lot.
  • Violen is the worst of the X-Hunters, especially if you fight him for his Zero part. The main danger in fighting him comes from his gigantic mace, which he loves to recklessly swing around his arena. Its massive size and startling speed make it tough to dodge already, but its movement is also completely random, meaning that defeating him is often a Luck-Based Mission. He is weak to Bubble Crab's weapon... but its questionable range means that you'll often want to be right in front of him to hit him with it, which makes it easier for that mace to crush you. He's still tough during his mandatory boss fight in the X-Hunter base, but at this point you likely have a plethora of upgrades to make him a lot easier.
  • He's tough, but manageable in his optional battle, but when you fight him in the X-Hunter base, Serges decides to stop playing around. He trades his mobile platform for a huge four-cannon tank that assaults you with a number of powerful laser blasts, which are made tricky to dodge thanks to being fought on four small platforms that are constantly changing height. You're also fighting him over a bed of instant kill spikes meaning that one slip up will result in you immediately dying. This is tricky enough, but that's only the first phase! After you destroy the cannons, you have to attack Serges who is constantly shifting his elevation around and firing off green blasts that shoot pellets in either an X or plus formation. Hitting Serges at this point is an exercise in frustration not only because of his inability to stay still, but because your attacks only count if they hit him; hit his capsule and they bounce off. If he truly is Dr. Wily like the game implies, then this fight is right up there with Mega Man 7's Wily Capsule in terms of Wily boss fight difficulty.
  • If you collect all of Zero's parts from the X-Hunters, then you'll be able to skip the battle against Zero at the end of the game. If you don't, you're in trouble. The only weapon that really hurts him- the Speed Burner- is hard to hit him with, and his attacks are hard to dodge. And after you've beaten him (probably draining all your Sub-Tanks in the process), you still have to fight Sigma. The moral of the story is to get all of his parts, no matter how hard they are to get early in the game.

Mega Man X3

  • Crush Crawfish, mainly because if he grabs you with his huge pincers and lives up to his name, he does so much damage it's not even funny.
  • Byte isn't all that difficult if you know what you're doing, but he uses an absolutely cheap and never-before-seen gimmick to utterly crush the unprepared. He throws a device on the wall that slowly repels X. He'll charge at you shortly after it attaches. If he hits you, he'll punch you into the ceiling, wait for you to fall, punch you into the opposite wall, and repeat the pattern. You cannot break free from the punch combo, and it's his one and only attack, so he can easily loop it until half your health bar is gone. He's too big to jump over, so you have to either execute a well-timed up air dash or dash-jump at the wall and use the split-second of hang time you have to dash-jump over him. Oh, and whenever he hits the wall, if you aren't in mid-air, you're on your butt, so you better have hopped over him before he hits.
  • Sigma and Kaiser Sigma. Sigma's swapped out his Z-Saber and Wolverine Claws for a Captain America (comics)-esque shield, which defends him from all attacks as long as it's bared. His main attack consists of spraying fireballs all over the place, which have an unpredictable pattern and do huge damage. They can be avoided by air-dashing to the wall Sigma's adjacent to, so of course he begins throwing his shield to knock you out of the sky. And when you do bring him down, you get to face Kaiser Sigma, who takes up a quarter of the screen, fills another quarter of it with floating mines, has a weak spot about the size of a pinhead, and keeps his back to you for half the match. Oh, and when he's dead, you have to do an escape segment with rising lava eager to nip away your last few bars of health while his virus form harrasses you. He may be the final boss, but he's considered to be easily the worst of all the SNES games.

Mega Man X4

  • Magma Dragoon considering he has both the fire based Hadoken (Fireball) and Shuryuken (Dragon Punch) and loves to constantly spam these moves. This isn't even the best part as when he gets hurt enough he'll shoot out a large stream of fire, or summon a fiery meteor storm that is pretty much impossible to dodge. This is take Up to Eleven with Zero who has to get up close and personal, unlike X who can easily fight him from a decent distance away.
  • Sigma's an exhausting grudge match, with three stages, the last consisting of two separate bosses, and no breaks in between. The first form goes down easily enough, but the second delights in chasing you around with his Sinister Scythe and filling the screen with projectiles, and the third? Each form stays on screen for maybe thirty seconds at a time, and alternates with three robot heads who try to knock off bits of your health and never stay dead for good. One of the two forms is prone to busting out a nasty laser attack with maybe a second's window for dodging, and the second has a nearly unavoidable garbage-spray and an attack that can knock you into some insta-kill spikes. And while X can tear through the first two forms with ease and at least keep the last at a safe distance, Zero has to deal with these things up close.

Mega Man X5

  • Duff McWhalen/Tidal Whale, who's one of the biggest mavericks ever is basically like a whale version of Burst Man from Mega Man 7, has a very difficult attack pattern to dodge, and when he Turns Red, he actually tries to push you into spikes for an instant death which means you have to fight against him blowing you back and hitting him without taking too much damage or getting hit by the spikes.
  • If you thought Storm Eagle was bad, The Skiver/Spiral Pegasus is a nightmare, boasting the same sort of attacks, but all vastly more difficult, coming from all directions at high speeds. Oh, and making him a standout from every other boss in the entire series, he does not have an actual weakness to a specific power. Instead, he can be frozen with the timestop power, which doesn't last long enough to punch off a decent portion of his health.
  • Black Devil in the first Fortress stage is hard for X, but a NIGHTMARE for Zero. Besides a very hard-to-dodge spam attack, his weak point is his eye, which fires yellow orbs at you, and the most effective attack against him is lightning. X has his buster and Tri-Thunder weapon, both of which are ranged, but Zero has to use his saber and the E-Blade, which he slashes upwards while moving forward slightly. This means he has to get practically in the boss's face to use it, but far enough away not to touch the body (which deals massive damage). Add to the fact that sometimes the eye appears in a place which you plain can't reach with the saber, and you get a very difficult boss for Zero to counter.

Mega Man X6

  • Infinity Mijinion, whose main gimmick is cloning himself. His clones have the uncanny ability to get in your way a whole bunch until you forget which one's the real one. It doesn't help that even getting to him is a huge problem because the entire stage is spent fighting a giant miniboss, which is no walk in the park either. Heck, this is a case in which using the boss' weakness probably makes the battle harder. Trying to even hit Mijinion with the uncharged Guard Shell is difficult, if only because it only works against one of his attacks (which is barely used, mind you), but if it does hit, it creates another clone. It wouldn't even be that bad if the clones didn't have so much health, usually taking three charged normal shots to destroy.
    • This is taken Up to Eleven with Zero if Infinity Mijinion does his ultimate move and hovers in the air in the middle of the room dropping an endless amount of clones. X can at least stay on the wall and shoot him, but Zero has to do a huge wall jump from the top of the wall and strike him in midair.
  • DESU BORU!! Er... High Max. AKA 'Assclown'. "Hmm... What's this glowing crystal-like thing here? Oh, wow! Haven't been here before. Guess I can fight the main boss later. Huh? A door? Must be the main boss. Wait a minute... Pfft! This guy's no problem... Oh, wait. I don't have any weapons on me, and I need them. Like, at all. Time to kill myself!"
    • Plus, if you take him on with Zero, his only weakness is a very short range attack, and then you still need to slash him to do damage. Be sure not to touch him though! Then, he Turns Red and starts firing off projectiles four at a time, which, if you weren't absolutely careful before, will probably kill you very quickly.
  • The Sub Boss of Blaze Heatnix's stage. Which you fight 5 times over the course of the entire stage, with exactly 1 segment that doesn't involve fighting it or the actual boss. The worst offender is the part where you fight it while forced-scrolling upwards on very small footholds. Which the sub-boss is bigger than. It doesn't help that there's insta-kill lava covering half the fucking screen.
    • Heatnix's miniboss is cake if you've used X to beat Metal Shark Player or used Zero to beat Infinity Mijinion first. Slap it with X's fully charged Metal Anchor or Zero's Giga Attack twice and it's gone. The real bastard is Gate. Invulnerable to all your attacks, so you have to turn his back on him, and tends to fly right into you. His attacks are ALSO hard to turn back on them, since they need to be level with him, and then hit him in the face as they break from damage. The most damning part of the fight is the arena. There is no floor, so you're liable to fall to your death more often than not. The only good thing about this battle is that you freeze in place when Gate runs out of health, so there's no risk of falling to your death after beating him senseless.
  • The Nightmare Mother(FUCKER!!)... Good God. On Normal difficulty, this boss fits her name to a damn tee. On Xtreme, she cranks this up to insane heights. Both cubes move at an accelerated speed even at full health and can change direction whenever they like, all while constantly firing projectiles at you until they stop. And if they do stop, you better hope the gods are smiling on you, since her attacks can be used by both eyes and combine sickeningly. Each eye can release shockwave-producing projectiles, raining fireballs, floating orbs that shoot lightning or even set the floor on fire. Two out of four of these attacks reduce your dodging room severely, and if they ever set the floor on fire AND shoot the lightning orbs, then you better. Fucking. Pray.

Mega Man X7

  • Snipe Anteator. On paper, his weakness was the "Moving Wheel." In the game, you could barely get said weapon to hit him. Even if you could, it actually did LESS damage than a fully charged X-Buster. Translation: Just use X already. Oh wait, you have to unlock him first! On top of that, he doesn't have a hitstun animation, meaning that he can counter your attacks as they hit him.
  • Then there is Flame Hyenard. You had to damage a mech travelling over hot lava so you could get to him. This is easier said than done since the camera can screw you over. Then you fight Flame Hyenard. He splits himself into clones that shout "BURN! BURN TO THE GROUND!" The weapon he's weak against actually works, but if you're using X or Axl, you'll run out of ammo long before he is dead. And he has a Scrappy Level to boot!
  • And then there is Red. If you don't have Zero, good luck to you. You have to target Red from a distance. Since the camera enjoys screwing you, this becomes a problem. Dodging his attacks is problematic because you're not fighting on solid ground. You're fighting on platforms with a hole in between each one. Fall and you die. Get hit while jumping and you will die. He constantly teleports around on those platforms and there is no way to predict where he will end up. The only way to finish the fight quickly is to use Zero and take Collision damage while slashing him.

Mega Man X8

  • Bamboo Pandamonium. He's big enough that you can't get behind him without taking a hit, and has attacks that take up big chunks of the screen. Also, his desperation attack hits like a train and comes with virtually no warning. It's more bearable with the Ride Armor...What's that? You didn't know that you could take it with you? Too bad! And you don't have access to it at all in the Boss Rush, so good luck with that.
  • Lumine. He comes after That One Level, and is fought directly after Sigma, who's hard enough to begin with. He has two forms; the first one uses the desperation attacks of the first 8 bosses except some are modified to last longer; when Burn Rooster's attack comes out, it lasts for the duration of the match. In other words, once it happens, you can't use the walls to dodge his attacks. Additionally, he himself is always moving, making it hard to hit him. Once you've drained his health, he enters the second form, which has a multitude of laser attacks (one of which lasts a long time and then comes back in reverse), has no weakness and is difficult to get a bead on. But the real hell comes once his health dips low and he uses Paradise Lost; if you don't kill him in the next 30 seconds, GAME OVER. No continues, nothing; you're done. Oh, and did you know you had to have Axl finish him with a Doubleteam as a prerequisite for the secret ending?

Mega Man Legends

Mega Man Legends

  • There are two times in the game where you are forced to fight from a slow-moving vehicle and defeat several enemies and then a boss fight, while protecting your vehicle from the attacks. If the vehicle is destroyed, it is an automatic Game Over.
    • The first one is from a boat, and you're fighting several submarines and a few Draches, which can shoot torpedoes at your boat. After that, you fight the Balkon Gerät, a giant frog battleship-mecha, which will merrily chop your boat to pieces if you can't dish out damage fast enough.
    • This is made worse later with the Flutter. You have to fend off several Draches, the Gesellschaft itself, and then the Focke-Wulf, Tron's personal attack aircraft. The Focke-Wulf is especially nasty, the attacks that don't hit you WILL hit the Flutter. Unless you're specced for long-range damage output, you're not going to have a fun time.
  • The Karumuna Bash trio, three doglike Reaverbots in the Clozure Woods Sub-gate. Those things are nasty if you're not Crazy Prepared for them. They all attack you at once and they are FAST. Their primary attack is jumping at you, which knocks Mega Man down and is possibly also a Camera Screw if you land right. Their other attack is to breathe fire, which instantly depletes your life meter's shield so you can take MORE damage from their jump attack.
    • Actually, these guys are some of the easiest bosses in the game. Just keep running in a circle while rotating the camera and firing off shots. It takes forever, but you can win without even taking damage.

Mega Man Legends 2

The Misadventures of Tron Bonne

Mega Man Battle Network

Repeat Offenders

  • In every single Battle Network game to date, there's a Bonus Boss fight against Bass.EXE. And no matter if it's the traditional games or more off-the-wall spinoffs like Network Transmission or Battle Chip Challenge, he's a nightmare of a boss befitting of the status as one of the most powerful Net Navis in the series. Simply damaging him requires for you to break through his LifeAura, a forcefield that you can't penetrate unless you hit it with a single attack that's equal to or greater than the damage threshold needed to break it. Don't get cocky when you break it because it'll regenerate periodically, and Bass is dangerous with or without it: he has a ton of health, and his attacks come out fast and in Bullet Hell patterns that are excruciatingly hard to dodge. Don't even think about beating him without a top-tier chip folder, because he'll easily trounce you if you bring anything less than your absolute best to the table.
  • ProtoMan.EXE gets a lot of hype for being a powerful Navi operated by a child prodigy, and by god does he live up to it. He's a lot more mundane than Bass since he sticks to more grounded swordplay than the ridiculous attacks he relies on, but it's all he needs to ruin you. His shield makes it hard to hurt him without battle chips that can get past it, and even if you have them he's so damned fast that it's easy to whiff your shots and waste them. And to top it off, he's usually only vulnerable when he's about to attack, and his attacks come out fast. He's more of an Anticlimax Boss in the first game thanks to having easily-exploited AI, but there's no cheesing him in any game beyond that one.

Mega Man Battle Network

  • Most of the first game's bosses are fairly easy, but the same can not be said for MagicMan.EXE. He's constantly firing off a powerful ball of blue fire down the middle row, and is backed up by respawning Viruses that are quick to replenish when you delete them. And since the reinforcements and MagicMan himself each occupy one of the battlefield's three rows, you're constantly having to dodge attacks being fired off one after another which will often lead to you eating attack from a Virus or faceplanting right into MagicMan's flames when you try to dodge them. His one saving grace is that he never moves from his spot, but that doesn't make his fights any less overwhelming.
  • SharkMan.EXE is also pretty nasty. He spends most of his time hiding among two fake fins with his own fin indistinguishable from the rest. When the fins are on the same row as you, they launch themselves forward with insane speed which makes it hard to safely attack the real SharkMan, especially since they can block your shots. And when you actually hit him and force him to surface, he'll fire slow-moving water towers that can easily box you in and force you to either take a hit from them, or dodge right into one of his fake fins. Just fighting him is an ordeal, but perfect-running him for his V3 battlechip is a nightmare.

Mega Man Battle Network 2

  • QuickMan.EXE. The name alone should key you in to how annoying he's going to be. He is invincible at all times except during his attack frames, moves like a spastic monkey on crack, and his attacks are irritating to dodge, because Quick Boomerangs are really, REALLY fast moving It doesn't help that he's the second boss of the game, the first boss was a complete chump, and the next boss AFTER him isn't exactly threatening either, so he's not even really a "Wake-Up Call" Boss... Worse yet, it's entirely possible for the game to be Unwinnable By Mistake here, as you can't leave his area (either to recover HP or improve your moveset) once you enter (but nothing stops saving...)
  • ToadMan may look cute, but he's not to be trifled with. It's very hard to hit him because any time you're on the same row as him, he'll immediately teleport to the lily pad on the row opposite to the one he's currently on. And while you're fighting him, you're having to dodge a constant barrage of tadpoles while ToadMan himself can paralyze you with a ridiculously fast music note attack that homes in on you when you try to dodge it, and getting hit by it opens you up to get slapped by him for even more damage. Thankfully his battle chips allow you to use those obnoxious music notes, so it's at least worth suffering through hell to get them.
  • ThunderMan is yet another boss with a frustrating gimmick, and said gimmick is three clouds that travel across all three rows of the battlefield, back and forth. They can shield ThunderMan from most attacks since he hides in the back row, and if you block their path for too long, they'll hit you with a ball of lightning. They can also box you in and force you to get hit by the lightning bolts ThunderMan periodically summons. Oh, and unlike ToadMan you have to fight him to advance the story, and the fight happens after Lan's battle chip folder is stolen. If you have no prior knowledge of that, you can get seriously screwed over by a subpar folder, and just in case you thought to fight Viruses on the internet to get more? Too bad! You HAVE to beat him to access the local network!
  • 2 also had Napalm Man V3. He has 2000 HP, actually has moves that are difficult to dodge, and they pack quite a punch. Crystal Dragon Jesus help you if you have a Wood Style.

Mega Man Battle Network 3

  • DrillMan.EXE makes the game a nightmare. He has lower HP than most bosses, but that's because frontal attacks have no effect - his drill is always blocking frontal attacks, so you have to go around the drill with Wide Swords and such. Only a handful of chips can bypass his drill, so good luck having one in advance when he appears!
  • DrillMan.EXE's younger cousin BubbleMan.EXE is seventeen times as annoying! The bubble spam, the bubble spam! Aaaaaaaaaah!
    • To elaborate, he never leaves the back row and the center tile on his side is a hole from which spout an infinite number of bubbles, which block shots and home in on you, always moving into your row so as to block your line of fire at BubbleMan. Since they're limited by number on screen if you stand there shooting them they'll just spawn faster. Meanwhile BubbleMan is using his own attacks on poor distracted Mega Man. Luckily the electric-element first boss has a megachip that can hit and stun BubbleMan no matter where he hides.
    • And that's not even taking into account BubbleMan v3, who almost ascends to Goddamned Boss status. You can't even find him unless you have less than 1/4 of your max HP. Frickin' bastard.
  • KingMan is the second hardest boss. He hides in the far back row while his nearly invincible, regenerating chess pieces attack you and block your spaces. If that wasn't annoying enough, if you stay in the back row (the easiest way to avoid his chess pieces), Kingman has a "plan B" attack, where he summons some new chess pieces and permanently steals an entire row of your area. Not even Bass's auras can compare to this guy's cheapness.
  • The mandatory BeastMan Beta battle is friggin' unfair. Beastman moves rather fast around the screen, and will leap into your side of the field to attack (he likes to go behind you). Now, hitting him isn't as hard as it sounds, but he still is fast and deals a lot of damage.
  • Flame Man has two candles on his back row, each of which have about 20 HP or so, and revive after a short amount of time. They have different effects depending on their color, and if even ONE of them is Green, he's invincible. If one's Red, he recovers HP steadily, and if one's yellow, then fire appears in your area and limits your movement range. Even worse, he can have two of the same candle, which means he can be recovering HP AND invincible at the same time. And his attacks are designed to take advantage of this.
    • This is completely trivialized with Area-grab. You see, his attacks were all designed with the idea that you were fighting in a 3x3 area. That extra row means that outside of you standing directly in front of him, he can't even hit you. Granted this doesn't do much for your grade if you can't beat him in time but it pretty much nerfs him from a YMMV to Guide Dang It.
  • Even among Final Boss standards, the two-stage finale is a hair-puller.
    • You start things off with a mandatory fight against Bass.EXE. Nope, it's not a Hopeless Boss Fight like his earlier encounter, you have to beat him to get to Alpha. And he's only a little less tough than he is as a Bonus Boss, meaning that your folder needs to be built around countering his Life Aura, killing him quickly, and killing Alpha, who has its own frustrating gimmick to deal with.
    • As for Alpha itself, this big amoeba... thing presents its own set of problems. Because it's practically a Devil boss in all but name, you can only hurt it by shooting its core, and it's protected by a thick wall of gel. To break down the gel, you need to rapidly shoot it with your MegaBuster, and doing so is frustrating since you constantly need to dodge its attacks, and if you don't shoot it down quickly enough, the core's protective field will gradually rebuild itself. Some of his worst attacks include a predictable, but fast and lethal assault from his claws which attack you from two different angles on your side of the battlefield, and a ludicrously powerful, very hard to avoid laser blast. And the kicker? If you lose to this guy, you get to battle Bass again before fighting him! Ain't life just swell?!

Mega Man Battle Network 4

  • Duo is an anomaly among bosses due to only having one functional row of tiles on his side of the battlefield, meaning that tile-reliant attacks like the Game-Breaking Air Hockey battle chips are worthless. Not a good sign already, but what makes Duo frustrating is his love of panel-cracking attacks: most of his fist attacks will break the panels on your side of the field, making the fight unwinnable if you don't have Air Shoes or a Panel Return handy since this will make it to where you can't dodge anything.
    • That's not the only way the fight against Duo can become unwinnable. Thanks to the game's New Game+ structure you'll fight Duo in a "normal" playthrough with more-or-less the chips you'd get in the first third of one of the other games, and when you fight him on a New Game+ he'll have his health scaled up to truly ridiculous levels. A Marathon Boss is fine for a final boss normally, but problematic in the Battle Network series because no matter how long the battle lasts you can ONLY draw thirty chips. If you don't pack your folder with thirty of the most damaging chips/combos in your library (and then consistently hit with them, as they likely won't be the easiest to connect with), or throw too much defense in your folder, you will run out of attacks before he runs out of health. For the third fight you pretty much need a top tier combo folder out of a strategy guide just to deal enough damage, never mind actually fighting him with it. Oh, and if you're relying on drawing just the right combo in the same hand, for a PA or a powered-up megachip, you'll have to fight another boss right before him every time you get unlucky. Or miss.
  • While he may be the most infamous among the game's bosses, Duo's hardly the only tough one. SparkMan is one of the bosses you can potentially fight in the first tournament in either version of the game, and an annoyance on par with BubbleMan and ThunderMan. SparkMan doesn't move around like most Net Navis, instead teleporting in a way that makes him very hard to hit while constantly sending mines down your side of the field that detonate in an X-shaped explosion and block any attacks intended for him aside from a few like Air Hockey. He can also send a wave of sparks snaking down your side of the field that requires stupidly tight timing to dodge, as well as summon a shadowy clone of MegaMan from behind that will shank you with a sword unless you dodge the very second he spawns. It's hard to tell just when he's at his deadliest: if he's fought in your first playthrough, he'll have low health but you'll have weaker chips. On subsequent playthroughs, you'll hit harder thanks to having better chips... but he also hits harder and faster, and will have more HP to boot. No matter what though, trying to get the SP chip from his Omega leveled Navi ghost sucks.
  • Speaking of ThunderMan, he returns in Red Sun, now packing one thundercloud to annoy you with instead of a trio. On paper this makes it sound like he was hit hard with the nerf bat, but don't get cocky: the three thunderclouds, while annoying, wouldn't hurt you unless you got trapped between them and the borders of the playing field. The singular cloud here, however, orbits the entire playing field and will constantly fire sparks at you every time you and it occupy the same row or column. Getting hit by one of its sparks will stun you, and since it travels around the field very quickly, you'll get zapped multiple times and lose a fuck-ton of health before finally regaining control. ThunderMan's own attacks aren't too tough to avoid on paper, but his row-spanning thunder beam comes out fast, as do the lightning strikes raining down on you from above, and trying to dodge them and the thundercloud's sparks at the same time often devolves into a chaotic, painful mess.

Mega Man Battle Network 5

  • CloudMan.EXE evidently took cues from Bubbleman.EXE. He stays in the back row, protected by clouds that periodically shoot electricity. The clouds don't have much health, but despite this can take infinite punishment from time-stopping Chips. He can also hide in a cloud while summoning a pillar of clouds that chases you around, and the pillar remains even after CloudMan stops hiding.
  • Nebula Gray counts for similar reasons as Duo from the fourth game: his side of the field only has one row of functioning tiles, making tile-reliant strategies nearly useless against him. Combine that with attacks that are capable of leaving you a sitting duck by breaking the tiles on your side of the field, erratically firing severed hands that drain MegaMan's health and restore his own if they hit, and his summoning of MegaMan DS who can hit you with devastating Dark Chip moves, and you have a real mess on your hands.

Mega Man Battle Network 6

  • CircusMan. Like with CloudMan and BubbleMan, he loves hiding in the back row, where he's constantly hopping around and avoiding your attacks. Meanwhile, his clapping attack comes out so fast you barely have any time to react to it and is way too easy to dodge into, and if you get hit by his infamous "Tent Rape" Limit Break, you're left with a status ailment that makes it even harder to dodge him. If he fails to hit you with either of these attacks in later fights, he'll start spamming them in hopes of finally getting you.

Mega Man Network Transmission

  • This game is infamous for its Early Game Hell, with the first two bosses causing new players a ton of grief and frustration due to their status as surprisingly dangerous roadblocks. Starting off with the very first boss, FireMan.EXE's main attack (FireArm/"FIYAH AHM!") reaches across the entire stage and can't be dodged at all unless you slide between his legs. Thanks to its insane range and your slide's own middling range, you have to stay up close to him to avoid getting roasted by FireArm. Unfortunately, this puts you in the danger zone of his other attack, which has him ignite his body and burn you with the fire aura that follows. While both attacks have obvious audio cues, they come out fast and the short distance between you and FireMan means that you have to react the second he starts to attack. Whether you safely slide under him or not is basically a glorified coin flip, and you lose a ton of health if you get a bad "flip". Thankfully you get access to a few tools that can even the odds in the form of a few Aqua-element battle chips and Heat Armor from Roll, but the former requires a lot of money grinding if you want to afford them, while the latter doesn't do a good job at nullifying FireMan's insane damage output.
  • While GutsMan.EXE tends to be a walk in the park in the main Battle Network games, things aren't that simple here. GutsMan may lumber around slowly, yeah, but his attacks come out fast to compensate, and his Signature Move is a massive shockwave that does a horrific amount of damage and covers the entire battlefield. If you try to slide under him when he closes in on you, he's quick to turn right around and nail you with a GutsPunch... though that's assuming he doesn't just flatten you outright with the aforementioned shockwave attack. He also jumps around occasionally, and triggers earthquakes that stun you if you're on the ground when he lands. Get caught by this attack, and you're a sitting duck for whatever follows. While FireMan at least had an elemental weakness you could exploit, GutsMan's got none to speak of. All you can really do is try to keep one of your Recover chips on hand and pray while you try to damage race him to victory.
  • BrightMan.EXE isn't too bad if you save him for later, especially if you tackle NeedleMan.EXE first and grab some handy-dandy Wood-element chips to short him out with (NeedleMan's chip in particular turns him into a full-on Zero Effort Boss if you max it out). But if you go after him first (or at least before NeedleMan during the first "branching paths" scenario) you've got a real menace on your hands. As one of the first bosses to put up shields against your attacks, BrightMan is immune to almost everything you throw at him unless he's attacking. He's also a reactionary boss who usually won't attack until you do, and he does so with lightning-quick homing lasers and Painfully-Slow Projectiles that open you up to said lightning-quick homing lasers. Your window through which you can hurt him is painfully tiny, and it's very hard to hit him without getting hit back while exploiting it. Unless you've got plenty of fast-attacking or time-stopping chips to hit him with, you're in for a real frustrating fight.
  • You didn't think this game's QuickMan.EXE fight would be easy, did you? If his brutal insta-kill laser-infested stage didn't correct that assumption, the always-obnoxious speedster himself will! Especially since this QuickMan fight is a horrifying "worst of both worlds" situation where he marries the most annoying aspects of his fights in the Classic games and Battle Network 2. Like in the classic games, he's an unpredictable and aggressive spaz. And like in Battle Network 2? You can't hurt him at all unless he's in the middle of attacking you! There's also no elemental weakness for you to exploit, so all you can really do is hit him with the most powerful chips in your arsenal and hope for the best.
  • StarMan.EXE makes up for his lack of shields with his love of annoying you with Teleport Spam. He'll often dodge your attacks at the last possible second, and there's no way to consistently hit him unless you use time-stopping Navi chips, or attacks that hit him from beneath. His attacks also cover a ton of ground, especially his meteor shower. Depending on your positioning and how many stars he sends crashing down on you, it can be legitimately impossible to dodge unless you've got an Invis/Stonebody chip at the ready.
  • Zero.EXE's every bit as tough as you'd expect The Heavy to be, especially when The Heavy is the Battle Network incarnation of one of the biggest badasses to ever grace the Mega Man franchise. Zero, like BrightMan, blocks your attacks by default, so you have to hit him while he's attacking if you want to deal any damage. The problem is that he's fast, relentless, and his Z-Saber has a ton of range, meaning that it's hard to safely attack him without getting sliced to ribbons right back. And when he's low on health, he'll briefly turn invincible and fire off a pair of massive sword beams that are genuinely impossible to dodge if you don't have any Invis chips on hand. If you don't, then it's a guaranteed kill if you're low enough on health. And he'll use it multiple times if you don't finish him off quickly enough!

Mega Man Zero

Mega Man Zero

  • Aztec Falcon, the first mission boss is almost impossible the first time you fight him. You have no charge attack (unless you spent time grinding it out by going back to the Underground Base; if you're playing on Hard, you're screwed), he isn't vulnerable to combos, and the Z-Buster actually bounces off when the chance to shoot him presents itself.
  • Phantom is spectacularly cheap compared to his fellow Guardians. Three of the Guardians have an elemental weakness which makes beating them fairly simple. Not Phantom. He's neutral, so it takes longer to kill him. Worse, the other Guardians can have most of their attacks interrupted. Only Phantom's dash attack can be interrupted. It is technically possible to interrupt his Doppleganger Spin technique with a charged blow, but for added cheapness Phantom will break the technique and strike you should you close in to attempt it. Speaking of the dash attack, he'll often do it until you hit him, and he charges to your position. If you don't hit him right off the bat, he'll get at least one hit in, maybe more if you don't score a knockback hit. Finally, his Desperation Attack makes him invisible, during which he'll throw kunai at you from random points on the screen. What's worse, he may potentially position himself above the reach of your weapons, or just plain above you. To top this, he has a Kaizo Trap ability in the second battle.
    • Phantom's caveat is that he's nearly impossible if you fight with the Z-Saber, but a total pussycat if you use the Buster. It locks him into his doppleganger attack and interrupts his dashes even at half-charge. On the other hand, he'll instantly counter at every opportunity if Zero tries to go samurai on him.

Mega Man Zero 2

  • Phoenix Magnion is plain ridiculous. He has an arena which spews fireballs from the floor, for starters. You can arrange it so the floor is blocked the first time you fight him, but not the second. What's worse, he dodges every attack. He literally cannot be hit unless he's attacking. And when he dodges, he counterattacks with very wide-area abilities.
    • He's an Expy of M. Bison, which helps explain his difficulty (Of course). That huge fireball he "shoots" after dodging backwards is the Psycho Crusher. Hit the fireball (with him inside) with a thunder attack(It's your only chance of winning in Hard Mode!).
    • Also, Phoenix is purely reactive, which means that if Zero just closes the distance and waits for a second then he'll begin an attack without dodging or teleporting and leave himself wide open.
  • Kuwagust Anchus on Hard Mode is just insane! Not only is he really fast and powerful (two hits = dead, period), but he's the boss of That One Level! And he has an attack which can't be dodged, meaning you have to get him to change his flight path. And the only way to do this is to either shoot him with the buster enough times, which takes better timing than God to pull off, or deflect him with the Chain Rod. As if you're just supposed to know this out of hand. And he'll keep using this attack till you die.

Mega Man Zero 3

Mega Man Zero 4

  • Kraft from Zero 4 is a nightmare to fight against. The grenades, the laser rifle that requires you to dash underneath it with split second timing, the giant knife that damages you as it throws you across the arena, the missiles, and the fact that he's one of the few bosses willing to get right directly up in your face on a non-scrolling single-screen battlefield are awful.
    • Making it worse is that you can't revisit stages. Couldn't find Subtanks or enough E-Crystals to upgrade your Cyber Elf? Too bad! Also, he appears after you've beaten 4 out of 8 stages. He also has no weaknesses. Some people were left with no choice but to restart the game.


Mega Man ZX

Mega Man ZX

Mega Man ZX Advent

  • The Spidrill miniboss! It breaks the floor (which, in addition to removing a quarter of your standing space, can affect whether or not you unlock a vital checkpoint so that you never have to do that again), the walls have got spikes on, it summons miniatures of itself, and it has an irritating tendency to spam a move that spins its legs around. The upgraded Spidrill Neo fight in the Quarry is comparatively easy for nixing the first two aspects and coming right after you unlock Model ZX.
  • Chronoforce on Expert starts the fight with Time Bomb, and it never wears off, so he's always in turbo speed. What's more, you know that spreading icicle move he does that you were able to jump between on Normal? Now he shoots two sets of icicles, the second set covering all the angles the first doesn't, making a roughly 90-degree arc that's really tough to avoid whether you try jumping between them or dashing underneath Chronoforce to get past them entirely. And may God help you if you haven't figured out the trick to dodging his attack where he shoots a whole volley of potentially exploding icicles at you from the background, then rewinds them to hit you again.


Mega Man Star Force

Mega Man Star Force

Mega Man Star Force 2

  • The Infinity bosses, particularly Cancer. They managed to take one of the (arguably) easiest bosses in the game, and upgrade him to have absurd speed and 2800 HP (!). On top of that, his claw attack is now so fast that it's basically an unblockable 200 damage unless you have an Invisible on you.
  • Apollo Flame, in both the second and third games. 2500 HP to start, and that number just keeps climbing. Has a shield that regenerates very quickly and very often, and also has an unavoidable attack that does huge damage, cracks the floor and it's hard to knock him out of it. Also, his weakness (Water cards) doesn't have a lot of heavily-damaging moves - the best ones out there are secret cards, and unless you're really, REALLY lucky, you won't find them.

Mega Man Star Force 3

  • In terms of storyline bosses, Acid Ace in 3. He has a huge repertoire of moves, with something to break any Noise, and he doesn't follow a clear pattern with them. Then there's the matter of his R form, which is fought directly after Dread Joker R without a chance for you to heal.

Mega Man Fangames and ROMhacks

  • Rock Man 4 Minus Infinity gets incredibly sadistic near the end when it introduces its hybrid Robot Masters, which are a Robot Master with the AI of another one leading to some nasty combinations. The Cut/Elec Man hybrid is easy enough, but after him is Wood/Quick Man, which combines Wood Man's bulk and tricky-to dodge attacks with Quick Man's agility and unpredictability. Oh shit. It gets even worse however with Needle/Gemini Man. What's the gimmick to his fight, you ask. Oh nothing, you just fight TWO NEEDLE MEN AT ONCE. Needless to say, this is not a fun section in the slightest.
    • The Wily Capsule doesn't let up either. Wily teleports around the screen like crazy and showers you with all sorts of difficult-to dodge projectiles, some home in on you, others explode and fill the screen with bullets ala Touhou. And if that wasn't bad enough, the good doctor has multiple health bars and his hitbox is deceptively small. You need a ton of e-tanks before you even think about surviving this battle.
  • Rockman 6: Unique Harassment
    • Before the nerf in version 1.1, Spark Man was quite challenging. He's quite fast in the second phase and could deal a lot of damage before you could blink.
    • Jewel Man is quite irritating because he forces you to deal with his jewels, possibly wearing you down before the main event.
    • The Block Devil in Wily Stage 1. It's a hybrid of the Yellow Devil from Mega Man 1, the Dragon boss fight from Mega Man 2, and the King Jet boss from Megaman & Bass. Basically, you have to constantly dodge the Block Devil attacks while avoiding a drop into the bottomless pit. To make matters worse, his weakness is the Tomahawk Assist. While that ability can help you out in a pinch, you need conserve it for attacks on the boss.
    • The Wily fight in Wily Stage 4. It's a long, arduous six-phase fight. Luckily, Mega Man gets a refill for every two phases. But it's still tedious to deal with.
  • Mega Man Unlimited:
    • Jet Man tends to spend most of his time taking flight and soaring through the skies, meaning that the window of time you have to hurt him through is tight as it is. But the missiles he shoots at you come out insanely fast, and the bombs he drops on your head require near-pixel perfect timing to dodge. And when he's moving around on the ground, he generates suction that can easily pull you into him for collision damage if you aren't careful.
    • Glue Man's attack pattern is simple but effective: he slides from one end of his room to the other and fires a few Glue Shots at you. And if you're hit, you're helplessly stuck while he rams into you for a ton of damage. His mobility makes hitting him annoying, and his room is so small that it's just as hard to dodge his Glue Shots, so expect to burn through quite few E-Tanks once you take this guy on.
    • Yoku Man's not only annoyingly dodgy, but can instantly kill you by generating death spikes that quickly converge on your location, requiring the player to have unbelievably good reflexes to make it to the safe spot without running right into him. In theory he should avoid this trope due to his stage being fiendishly hard and optional, thus making him a Bonus Boss... but even if you don't go to his stage, he's still waiting for you in the Occupied Wily Fortress boss rush meaning that you have to fight him no matter what. Thankfully, beating him in his stage properly gives you the Yoku Attack, which makes very short work of him in the rematch.
  • Mega Man Rock Force
    • Fuse/Boom Man's boss fight is a chaotic maelstrom of explosions, with him constantly sending Phantom Fuses that home in and snake after you when you try to dodge him while also tossing sticks of dynamite that explode in humongous bursts. Funnily enough, the attack where he throws tons of dynamite at you is easy to dodge since it comes out in an easily predictable, easily manipulated pattern meaning that defeating him is often a matter of hoping that he'll spam it. If not... heh, good luck.
    • Shock Man's proper boss fight is essentially the world's deadliest game of jump rope: everything he does shocks the floor meaning that you constantly have to jump while fighting him, and it's all too easy to botch the incredibly strict timing and keep jumping right into the damaging floor or the lightning he summons.
    • Charade Man is tough enough when he mimics Quick Man for his stage's mini boss fight. But in his boss fight proper, his strategy is to be annoying by flooding the stage with activity. The balls he throws bounce around while either exploding into a pellet scattershot or an annoying Charade Man clone, and he loves to toss tons of them out in quick succession. May god have mercy on your soul if you try to fight him without the Crypt Cloak, though even with it victory is far from assured.
    • If you get hit by any of Virus Man's attacks, he gets you with an infection that reverses your controls and neuters your Mega Buster, and it takes a long time to wear off. In the meantime, he's free to hit you with nasty attacks such as throwing his upper half at you or summoning a cloud of virus enemies that spread in an awkward-to-dodge formation unless you kill them all right when they appear. The former is especially awful because you have to slide under it twice to dodge, which is infinitely more complicated when your controls are reversed. And that's not even getting into the annoying little tadpole enemies he has constantly hounding you during the fight...
  • Skullman In: Scooby Doc 4: The Destroyer (Featuring Atsushi Onita) is a Boss Game, so a few of these are to be expected.
    • Ford Taurus may have been tricky, but Red Skull is officially where the kid gloves come off. All his projectile attacks home in on you, with some of them being massive fireballs that are nearly impossible to avoid. And when he isn't spamming homing shots, he's hitting you with a laser barrage that requires precise timing to avoid. His one saving grace is that he's easy to hit, since he's a massive target.
    • Shadow the Hedgehog is fought in a motorcycle duel, and your bike severely limits your movement while his does no such thing to him. While you're fighting to keep yourself from getting pinned on the left side of the screen, Shadow's bouncing around at random and firing the Chaos Emeralds at you with wild abandon.
    • Non-Human's attacks may come in single shots, but their patterns tend to be annoying and frustrating to deal with. Special mention goes to his skulls, which home in on you and explode into a scattershot when they hit the wall, meaning that they likely can and WILL hit you even if you dodge the first attack. Lesser but still annoying are his fingers, which will jump to throw off your dodge timing before rushing straight into you.
    • Atsushi Onita himself will show you exactly why he's got top billing in the game's title. There's no bullshit on his end, no obtuse game mechanics, nothing. Just pure, raw aggression and hard to dodge attacks. He never lets up, and at nearly every point in the fight you're either dodging storms of projectiles, tightly-spaced traps, and sword attacks that can fly in at any angle. On the bright side, he's a rare example that blends this trope with Best Boss Ever because once you learn how he works? He’s fun as hell to fight.