Cuphead/YMMV

These things about  are subjective - not everyone will agree with all of them.


 * Alternative Character Interpretation:
 * Thanks to having no dialogue aside from a handful of game over quotes, the Debtors' personalities are rife for speculation. How many of them knowingly made their deals with the Devil? How many of them did so accidentally? Are they evil, or decent people trapped in a bad situation? And what did they hope to gain from their deals in the first place?
 * Did the Devil simply sit back and let Cuphead's greed screw himself and Mugman over, or did he rig his dice roll? After all, this is the Devil that we're talking about.
 * Anticlimax Boss: He starts off brutal and challenging, but the Devil's final phase is a total joke. Why?.
 * Author's Saving Throw: Disappointed Mugman fans were over the moon when the 1.2 patch made him a playable character. Before that, the only way you could play as him if you were player 2 in a co-op game.
 * Breather Boss: Interestingly, Inkwell Island 3's got a decent amount of these despite being the second-to-last major location in the game, probably as a way to balance out the presence of some of the game's hardest bosses. Werner Werman, Sally Stageplay, and Captain Brineybeard don't have much in the way of Bullet Hell, and employ attacks that are easier to read and react to than many midgame bosses. While they still put up a decent fight (and Brineybeard can be tricky if you struggle to keep his barrel out of the way), chances are you'll beat them with only a few deaths to your name, and it's not uncommon for new players to clear them on their first try.
 * Catharsis Factor: Winning a boss fight and hearing the announcer's excited declaration of "BRAVO!" right when you land the final hit. Especially if its a boss that's been kicking your ass until that point.
 * Crosses The Line Twice: As of the 1.2 update, Sally Stageplay's fight has a secret, tougher path. How do you access it? By . It's every bit as messed up and heartbreaking as it is darkly hilarious.
 * Demonic Spiders:
 * The shrimps at the end of Perilous Pier attack in swarms, and fly at you in arcs that make it hard to shoot them down. Dodging isn't much easier because you don't have much room to move around on the head of the octopus you're riding, and the oyster behind you is constantly pelting you with attacks of its own. And if you're going for a P rank, killing them is not an option.
 * The stone lions in Rugged Ridge are one of the biggest obstacles you'll face if you're trying to get an A+ rank. Killing them isn't hard, but it is time consuming, and taking your time to kill every single lion you run into will cause you to miss the timeframe needed to get that perfect score. Ideally you want to avoid them, but their massive size makes it nearly impossible to safely jump over them or phase through them with Smoke Bomb.
 * The ghostly jockeys in 's boss fight. When you fly over them, they rocket into you insanely fast from below. They're easy to lose track of thanks to their small size and the stage's copious use of Interface Screw, but even without those factors taken into account, you need some seriously good reaction time to avoid them.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse:
 * King Dice, full stop. His catchy theme song, simplistic yet cool character design, and unique boss fight make him a very memorable foe, and it helps that he's one of very few opponents to have extensive dialogue to properly characterize him with.
 * Cagney Carnation was one of the very first bosses shown off during the game's prerelease period, and his cute yet creepy design made him something of a fandom darling near-instantly.
 * Grim Matchstick, for being one of the game's best examples of Badass Adorable. His tubby physique and shy demeanor make him lovable from the get-go, and his relentless fire attacks make him an opponent to be feared and respected. Frustrating as fighting him may be, he's far too much of a lovable cuddlebug for fans to hate.
 * Cala Maria. What's not to love about a gigantic, attractive flirt of a mermaid? Another point in her favor is her Adorkable reactions to things going badly over the course of her boss fight.
 * The unused Demon Bat boss shown off in the 2014 trailer has quite the fan-following thanks to its oddly cute and intimidating design.
 * Fanfic Fuel: As mentioned above, the motivations that led to the debtors making their own deal with the Devil are ripe for fanfic fodder.
 * Game Breaker:
 * The Smoke Bomb is practically the only charm you need, because the invincibility it grants you makes it a lifesaver against massive attacks that can otherwise only be dodged in certain specific ways.
 * The charms that give you extra hearts make it a lot easier to survive the game's Run 'n Gun stages and obtain that goddamned P Rank. While using them will weaken your attacks, it doesn't matter when you aren't allowed to kill anything to begin with.
 * Memetic Badass: The tutorial stage, which is jokingly referred to as the hardest, most brutal challenge offered by any game, let alone Cuphead, thanks to one journalist's repeated failures to clear an easy jump.
 * Memetic Mutation:
 * Cuphead being the "Dark Souls of Run'n Gun platformers" is a comparison often made by game journalists commenting on its difficulty. The absurdity of the comparison as well as Dark Souls comparisons being overdone in general has led to a lot of mockery and jokes at the expense of game journalists, as well as a surprising amount of crossover art, ultimately culminating in this beautifully rendered parody animation.
 * Speaking of Cuphead and game journalists, an infamous video] of a journalist struggling to get past the game's tutorial stage proved to be ripe for meme fodder, with people uploading their own parodies such as this.
 * Memetic Sex God:
 * King Dice has got legions of fangirls thirsting over him, and having a dice for a head and a Louis Armstrong-sounding voice do nothing to detract from his appeal. In fact, that's partially why he's so popular. He's also got plenty of charisma and cuts a dashing figure in that suit of his.
 * On the female side of things, there's Cala Maria and Ms. Chalice. Being a sexy giant mermaid, Cala Maria's popularity goes without saying, but in the case of Ms. Chalice she's got a lot of Moe appeal going for her.
 * Most Annoying Sound:
 * Getting hit results in the jarringly loud and unpleasant sound of breaking porcelain. Already annoying in standard play, but it's downright infuriating when you're going for a perfect run.
 * Dr. Kahl's laughter. It's irritating, condescending, and once he starts he never stops! Once you finally defeat him, it'll haunt your dreams for weeks to come.
 * Scrappy Mechanic: Simple mode. Defeating bosses with the difficulty set to Simple doesn't give you a Soul Contract. Since it seems like it wants to be more of a teaching tool so you can ease yourself into a tough boss fight, that's fair. But the big problem is that it isn't a good teaching tool, because the boss fights in Simple Mode are cut short! So ultimately, it doesn't really serve any kind of purpose and feels like it's there just to be there.
 * Some Anvils Need to Be Dropped: While you'll probably never visit a casino ran by the Devil himself, you can still learn a thing or two from Cuphead and Mugman's situation. Namely that gambling is a hell of an addicting vice, and it can and will ruin your life.
 * That One Boss: Cuphead is a tough game to begin with, but the second you step foot onto Inkwell Island 2, you start fighting some of the really dangerous debtors.
 * You fight Beppi the Clown on a rollercoaster track, and sadly, it isn't some generic setpiece. Once his second phase starts the coaster will start making its rounds across the track. And every time it drives by, you have to dodge the coaster itself, its dangerous passengers, and Beppi's attacks, which are onslaughts of vicious dog balloons and annoying horseshoe clusters. Thankfully, his transformation into a massive Merry-go-Round at the end of the fight means you now have platforms you can stand on to avoid the roller coaster... but guess what? Now he's got baseball-chucking penguins to hassle you with, and they've got quite the throwing arm!
 * There are many bosses who can seriously screw you with the RNG, and Baroness Von Bon Bon is one of the worst in that regard. The first three phases of her fight have her summon one of five food-themed minions, each with their own attack pattern. Not too bad at first, but as the fight progresses she starts throwing more obstacles into the mix: tiny jellybean soldiers that are easy to lose track of starting with phase 2, and then she'll grab a shotgun and start firing at you herself once phase 3 rolls along. The battlefield descends into chaos in a hurry, and minibosses like the eratic bouncing cupcake and projectile-spamming gumball machine are especially nightmarish once paired with the other obstacles. Her final phase is a lot less random, but it's instead a hellish balancing act between running away from her living castle, turning around and shooting at her, and avoiding her heat-seeking head after she tosses it at you.
 * If Hilda Berg and Djimmi the Great didn't teach you how to effectively use the aeroplane, Wally Warbles will serve as a nasty wakeup call. Bullet Hell is his specialty, and 3 out of 4 phases have you dodging overwhelming onslaughts of densely-packed projectiles while the big bird himself is very rarely left wide open for punishment.
 * Grim Matchstick's fight hits you with the unholy trinity of Platform Hell, Interface Screw, and Advancing Boss of Doom. You're constantly having to jump from cloud to cloud while fighting him, and they can be easy to miss thanks to the bright-colored background. And when you aren't getting hurt by losing track of the clouds and falling, you're getting smacked by his fire monsters' annoyingly accurate jump attacks or popping his fire bubbles and getting a face full of fireballs as a result. Oh, and if you didn't bring the Roundabout? Get ready for hell, because like with the Baroness, there comes a point where you have to constantly run away from him while fighting back. And unlike her, two thirds of his fight are like this.
 * And just in case you weren't sick of autoscrolling boss stages already, Rumor Honeybottoms is ready to make you cry! Her stage scrolls upward, forcing you to constantly scale a series of platforms while she pelts you with annoyingly large and chunky spells. Platform placement is also annoyingly random, meaning you can get screwed over if you're cornered by an attack and end up in a spot where you can't easily get to safety. But the worst part of this fight is easily the final phase, where she turns into a monstrous airplane. She sticks to the bottom of the stage once she transforms, where hitting her can be a true exercise in frustration depending on the shot types you've equipped. And both her attacks are obscenely annoying to dodge, with one being a pair of large, indestructible fists that home in on you, and the other being a sawblade attack that comes out fast with very little windup.
 * Dr. Kahl's robot is guaranteed to ruin your day. The first phase forces you to destroy several of the robot's body parts while dodging tons of annoying attacks, and the final phase has you dealing with Bullet Hell that puts Wally Warbles' to shame while trying to maneuver around electric gates that are trying to close you in. Even the easier second phase is annoying thanks to the homing missiles constantly flying in from offscreen.
 * Cala Maria. She's just as lousy with RNG abuse as the Baroness is, but what she lacks in miniboss summons she makes up for in freezing you in place by turning you into stone. Breaking out of it isn't hard, but there's still just enough time for you to get shot by an electric eel or crash into a wall while you're trying to shake the effects of your petrification off. And since her first phase pits you up against annoying enemies in unorthodox combinations, chances are you'll already be banged up once she starts pulling the petrification attacks out.
 * King Dice isn't that hard by himself,.
 * What an Idiot!: Gambling in a casino owned by the Devil was already a bad idea to begin with. But the second Old Scratch himself stepped into the parlor, Cuphead really should've quit while he was ahead and left the building.