Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc

Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc is a 2003 video game that was released by Ubisoft. It had John Leguizamo voicing Globox. The game notably didn't have Michel Ancel involved.

"" This manual just blows my mind. It explains that switches trigger mechanisms. Duh. Oh Geez, who's responsible for this garbage?""
 * Abhorrent Admirer - Begoniax the witch is one to Razoff.
 * Ambiguously Gay - Globox. He is attracted to the other sex, though (demonstrated in "The Hoodlums get organized", where he wants to meet whoever's behind the intercom.), and he does have 650 children.
 * All There in the Manual - Referenced in-game near the beginning, where Murfy actually takes out a manual to the game and reads from it in order to tell Rayman what to do next. (Yet the real manual for the game doesn't actually say anything that Murfy read.)
 * Big Bad: Andre.
 * Book Ends - The game begins with Rayman and Globox taking a nap as black lums swarm over the land. The game ends with Rayman and Globox settling down for a nap, during which Rayman's hands wander off to scare a red lum into becoming Andre.
 * Bottomless Pit Rescue Service - The Teensie Highways, in which a Teensie in a helicopter is shown to be carrying Globox, who catches Rayman and drops him off at a checkpoint if he falls off. Also, in one particular boss fight, falling off of one of the narrow pathways results in one of the long-necked creatures trapped in the dungeon down below lifting Rayman up and placing him back onto the path.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall - Most of the characters stick to the script, but Murfy completely avoids it, and Globox is guilty of it on the occasion too. Examples: "It's only a video game, it's only a video game..." "You were nicer in Rayman 2." "We're gonna be rated PG-13!" "Quit it, the manual says you're my best friend!" "Just 'cause you're on TV doesn't mean you have to show off!"
 * The manual breaks the fourth wall too, both by being there in the first place and by what it says.
 * Murfy also says "See you in Rayman 4!" which may also classify as a What Could Have Been
 * Bunny Ears Lawyer - All of the doctors.
 * Chasing Your Tail - The fight with the witch around the cauldron in the Bog of Murk.
 * Colossus Climb - The final boss fight does this in one phase.
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience - In trailer cinematics and box art, using the power-ups only changes the appearance of Rayman's fists in a way that would be reasonable for the power-up itself (spikes, missile launcher, lockjaw, etc). In-game, however, picking up any power-up will also give Rayman a differently-colored appearance to more easily show to the player which power-up they're currently using. This is Lampshaded when Globox scolds Rayman for 'dressing up in silly costumes' in several parts throughout the game.
 * Create Your Own Villain -.
 * Crosshair Aware - Some parts of the fight with Razoff have you looking through Razoff's crosshair while he's trying to shoot at Rayman.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Murphy plays this role in the first level.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Murphy plays this role in the first level.


 * Denser and Wackier: The humor in the game is more cartoony.
 * Disney Acid Sequence - The interactive transitions between worlds: you skate on colorful beams of light, surrounded by '70s LSD imagery.
 * The Dragon - Reflux.
 * Elaborate Underground Base - The Hoodlum factory area.
 * Every Ten Thousand Points - Unlocks bonus Mini Games.
 * Evil Tower of Ominousness - The Tower of Leptys.
 * Fate Worse Than Death - What happens to those that reject Begoniax' love.
 * Gainax Ending
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar - There are some very...suggestive...jokes in this game, it's quite surprising that this got an Everyone rating instead of a Teen rating. Also, plum juice acts as alcohol, as mentioned below.
 * Hunting the Most Dangerous Game - Razoff's Mansion in the Bog of Murk.
 * Hover Board - In the Teensie Highways.
 * I Can't Believe It's Not Heroin! - Plum juice and Globox's reactions to it. Also counts as Getting Crap Past the Radar, since he clearly gets drunk off it.
 * Invincible Minor Minion - The Knaaren.
 * Killed Off for Real: In the final boss fight, likely Reflux.
 * Knight of Cerebus: Reflux can give off this vibe, being perhaps the only character to have no humorous quirks.
 * Lava Is Boiling Kool-Aid
 * Level Up Fill Up - Whenever you fill up a medallion for freeing the Teensies found in six different cages, Rayman's health bar is increased and fully replenished.
 * Lighter and Softer - The environments and atmosphere still resemble Rayman 2, but more comedic, and there are still the Zombie Chickens...
 * Mascot Mook: The Hoodmongers, medium-sized hoodlums with large hats and large guns.
 * Mister Seahorse - It doesn't actually happen, but Globox dreams it. "It was great! I craved strawberries!"
 * My Dad Can Beat Up Your Dad - One of several rather entertaining arguments Knaaren can be heard having.
 * New Age Retro Hippie - Roméo Patti, the second Teensie Doctor.
 * Off-Model - Rayman is horribly off-model in the USA commercial. His torso looks like a flippin' DRESS the way it's shaped, and his eyes look different, especially when he squints his eyes. (Here is a link to an HD upload of it if you want to see the torso better)
 * The magazine ad (which also involved a pee joke, because Ubisoft's US marketing team seemed to have been obsessed with pee) has a better-looking model, in which only the face is off-model. Other than that, everything else seems to be on-model.
 * One-Winged Angel: Reflux during the final boss fight.
 * Only Idiots May Pass - Defeating an enemy with a $ symbol over its head causes a reusable power-up to appear somewhere in the general area. Sometimes, however, it is instead a smaller version of one of Rayman's shoes obscured by the power-up's typical glow; unless you'd already gone through the whole thing before, chances are you'd just take it for granted that it's a power-up and run into it. This ends up in a rather interesting, off-to-the-side surprise gameplay sequence, which upon completing will provide you with a real power-up. Thing is, if you are paranoid or clever enough to spot the difference without double-checking, you'll still have to fall for it in order to get the real power-up item, which is typically required in order to move on.
 * Rewarding Vandalism - You can break random wooden piggy banks around the levels to find gems or lums. Why someone would leave hundreds of wooden piggy banks filled with their precious belongings lying around in plain sight is another thing entirely...
 * Sequel Snark: Murfy leaves saying that he'll see us in Rayman 4. As of this writing, there has not been a game titled Rayman 4, or, indeed, any true sequel to Rayman 3.
 * Shout-Out - While attempting to open the doors, Globox can be heard calling out |"Klaatu barada nikto!"
 * He spouts off quite a few others if you stick around and listen for long enough. "Mirror, mirror, on the wall... nah, that won't work." "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!" and "Bibbidi bobbidi boo!" are particularly noteworthy.
 * Another of Globox's lines is 'Cthulhu alech fhtagn!', which has some serious mythological implications for Rayman's world...
 * And how about the countless references to Spider-Man 2, Star Wars, and other popular franchises courtesy of Murfy and Globox?
 * Razoff, the person that hunts you in his mansion, is Zaroff with the R and Z switched.
 * Super Not-Drowning Skills - Which is kind of a funny progression if you think about it: Rayman had Super Drowning Skills, Rayman 2 gave him the ability to swim but the Oxygen Meter still made it possible for him to drown, and now in Rayman 3 he doesn't drown at all (in normal water, anyway).
 * Suspicious Videogame Generosity - If André's constant conversations to Reflux at the end of the Tower of Leptys wasn't enough of a giveaway, the oodles of Red Lums broken out of piggy banks on the way up the staircase ought to have been some kind of indication that Rayman was about to encounter something likely to inflict large amounts of pain.
 * The Power of Rock - The doctors use this to 'cure' Globox (since André can't stand music).
 * Things Man Was Not Meant to Know - Weaponized. Andre somehow learned something that utterly corrupted him. He captures others and whispers it to them, then lets them whisper it to others, like an intellectual Zombie Apocalypse. It'd be horrific if the entire game weren't Played for Laughs.
 * Too Dumb to Live - Globox falls into a trap in Hoodlum Headquarters because he mistakes a badly-drawn cardboard cutout of a female Glute in a bikini to be the real thing.
 * Tripod Terror - Céloche, the mechanical tripod boss in the Land of the Livid Dead.
 * Tuxedo and Martini - Parodied in one of the "Wanna Kick Rayman" videos.
 * Twist Ending -  Holy shit!
 * Not
 * Underwater Boss Battle - Céloche in the Land of the Livid Dead.
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential - You can punch Globox when he's following you around. This results in some rather entertaining otherwise-unheard quotes by both him and André (while he's inside of Globox).
 * There are also turtles in the first level of the game that you can kick around, to which they protest loudly. They reappear in the Land of the Livid Dead, except this time you can pick them up and throw them too.
 * Villain Opening Scene
 * Yellow Snow - The USA commercial is all about this. However, it leaves one to wonder exactly how Rayman's bladder was able to store such a large amount of urine inside it...