I Know Mortal Kombat: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
Line 11:
[[Moral Guardians]] often take this trope ''way'' too seriously, begetting the concept of [[Murder Simulators]]. However if it did work, you could learn medicine from Dr. Mario and cure people with nothing more than a high powered microscope and a bag of Skittles.
 
Now as far as the controls, basic sense of tactics and (hopefully) physics are concerned, actual vehicle simulators ''can'' supplement real and semi-real (more hardware-based) training and experience. After all, that's where simulators came from to begin with. Also note the difference between video games designed to be fun, and simulator machines designed to accurately emulate a cockpit and be used in training. [[Captain Obvious|And of course]], even if vehicle in question doesn't subject the pilot to G-forces that could cause a blackout, the [[Reality Is Unrealistic|difference]] is likely to make [[Falling Into the Cockpit]] unsafe, if for no other reason than specific reflexes are still required to use the real controls fluently. This can also be the extreme version of [[The Tetris Effect]].
 
See also [[Ascended Fanboy]], [[Taught by Television]], [[Saw It in a Movie Once]], and [[Falling Into the Cockpit]]. When someone who knows what they're doing for real fails at a video game version, then it's [[I Don't Know Mortal Kombat]]. When someone tries to use fighting game moves in real life (and fails horribly), it can lead to [[What the Fu Are You Doing?]].
{{examples}}