The Anime of the Game: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (Mass update links)
m (update links)
Line 173: Line 173:
* ''[[Backyard Sports]]'' had a TV special, ''NFL Backyard Basics: Football Tips from the Pros''.
* ''[[Backyard Sports]]'' had a TV special, ''NFL Backyard Basics: Football Tips from the Pros''.
* ''[[BattleTech]]''
* ''[[BattleTech]]''
* ''[[Battletoads (animation)|Battletoads]]'' had [[One Episode Wonder|a pilot episode]] aired as a try-out for a potential series. It bombed on a spectacular level.
* ''[[Battletoads (animation)|Battletoads]]'' had [[One-Episode Wonder|a pilot episode]] aired as a try-out for a potential series. It bombed on a spectacular level.
* A ''[[Bubsy]]'' pilot was made and broadcast. Calling it a "crime against humanity" is entirely too kind.
* A ''[[Bubsy]]'' pilot was made and broadcast. Calling it a "crime against humanity" is entirely too kind.
* ''[[Captain N: The Game Master]]'' is a borderline case, since it is a [[Massive Multiplayer Crossover]] in an original setting.
* ''[[Captain N: The Game Master]]'' is a borderline case, since it is a [[Massive Multiplayer Crossover]] in an original setting.

Revision as of 06:54, 7 May 2014

In the same vein as The Film of the Book: when a popular game is adapted into an anime. Extremely common in the case of Visual Novels. A sister to Animated Adaptation, only the source is Video Games instead of Live Action TV or Film. The difference being that video games, by their very nature, are already animated.

May involve Bleached Underpants depending on the source. RPGs in particular tend to have sprawling plotlines narrowed or cut entirely.

If you're looking for the reverse of this trope--that is, the game derived from the anime--see Licensed Game.

Examples of games adapted to Anime:


Examples of games adapted to Western Animation

Examples of games adapted to Live Action TV:

Examples of games adapted to Web Animation:

  • The popular Arfenhouse Flash movies were loosely based on a series of freeware spoof RPGs using the OHRRPGCE engine.
  1. all of which save two, were based on previously existing arcade games