Demonic Spiders/Video Games/Platform Game

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


If the level design and Jump Physics don't kill you, the Demonic Spiders will.


  • In the Taito arcade game Rastan, at various points a flock of bats would come out, through walls and platforms. They would seem to get faster and faster, and not just come in a flock--they would come at you from all angles: above, below, fore and aft. Your barbarian with huge muscles and two-handed sword would soon be nickel and dimed to death by, yes, Goddamned Bats.
  • Drawn to Life have Shadow Goo Monsters. Particularly annoying in the second boss fight, where they keep spawning out of thin air, interrupting your jumps and whittling down your health meter as you try to attack the boss.
  • Lego Star Wars went from a light, enjoyable platformer to an exercise in precision controller-hurling over the course of the Dagobah level in The Empire Strikes Back, thanks to the incessant bats circling the swamp. Between Lego Luke's spastic lightsaber "technique" and the bats' instinct for homing in on him, the simple act of crossing a swamp became something slightly more difficult than, say, defeating a Sith Lord in one-on-one combat.
    • Dementors from LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4. While they usually only appear in Year 3, they're infurating while they appear. Their main attack drains health and has a long attack animation, and they appear in swarms. It's not uncommon to be attacked by three at a time, and after getting attacked by one, another one moves in until you die. They're only killed by one spell- and said spell has a long wait between attacks and is lengthy unless you jump and use it.
  • The infamous Red Arremers of Ghosts N Goblins fame. If you try to hit them straight they just dodge your weapons and fly away where you can't even think of getting them, have an annoyingly precise projectile attack, and fall on top of you with VERY QUICK dashes, helped sometimes by the game's glitchy walls and platforms. They're the number one cause of putting people out of the game, and in later levels there's plenty of these red bastards; since attacking them randomly is a no-no, only a patient and precise player can overcome them. And guess who was Capcom's Final Boss Mascot Fighter in SVC Chaos, and made a comeback in Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3?
  • The Nintendo Hard Wonderboy (especially the arcade version) and its NES clone Adventure Island:
    • The frogs, aka Kellos. Once you hit them once or get in range, they start jumping towards you and become very difficult to hit again before they kill you.
    • The cobras in Adventure Island, unlike Wonderboy, shoot erratically-moving venom projectiles.
    • Whalers (swordfish) tend to spawn while you're navigating tricky platform jumps, and come at you almost non-stop in the later ocean levels.
    • In the later levels you had to fight through hordes of literal demonic spiders (eg 7-4), if you die and lose your axe beforehand and there is no replacement readily available after the Point of No Return, Continuing Is Painful, and in fact the level may be Unwinnable without the axe.
  • Those ants in Bugdom. What's so annoying about them? It's the way they come back as invincible ghosts when you kill them in later levels. Fake Difficulty meets Demonic Spiders, and they get along well enough to gouge huge chunks out of your sanity. About the only reliable way to deal with them is to get them to throw their spear, dodge, and then run like a scared little girl while they're retrieving it.
  • The freakin' Hammer Brothers in the original Super Mario Bros. are, by far, the most dangerous mooks in the game thanks to their incredibly erratic hammer throwing patterns which will throw you for a loop if you try to jump on or over them. If you opt for simply running underneath them while they jump, their jumping is also random and gives you only a split second to react to. They aren't that bad when you're Fire Mario or when they appear on a platform above you, but when you're small and they appear on the ground in front of you, or even worse, on stairs (shudder...), they're extremely tricky to get around, let alone actually kill, without dying. (This mainly concerns their appearances in SMB 1 and the Japanese SMB 2; in later games they're significantly easier to deal with.) They weren't even in Super Mario World, the Amazing Flying Hammer Brother taking their place, which threw hammers much faster than their ground-based counterparts, making jumping on them a high-risk maneuver, while the Sumo Brothers actually caused lightning and fire to rain down upon you, couldn't be jumped on and were immune to fireballs. In Super Mario Galaxy 2, they became even worse, thanks to the Grandmaster Galaxy. (Not to mention The Perfect Run...)
    • The Lakitus from SMB 1 are worthy of mention. Not only are they Mook Makers, they tend to be very difficult to kill (they fly around quickly at the top of the screen, which means that fireballs are useless and only a very well-placed Goomba Stomp to the head can kill them)—and on some stages, flat-out impossible to kill, since the Malevolent Architecture won't allow for Mario to attain the necessary jump height to hit them. Oh, and they chase Mario throughout the stage.
    • Also in SMB 1 and the Lost Levels, we have the fish enemy Cheep Cheep, or at least the flying variants since their aquatic variants are incredibly easy to deal with. There's an infinite number of them in the levels where they appear, they jump around quickly, usually 3 at a time, and you can't tell where they come out until they already do and hit you. Thought you'd just take the high ground? Guess what? You need to climb to get to the high ground to begin with. You're probably low enough that you can't hope to react, and since their movement is erratic, you probably will get hit if you try being smart and jump around. Oh, and if you're dealing with them, you're probably having to deal with platforming that expects coordinated jumping. Hooray.
    • Their fellow aquatic enemies the Bloopers were also this in the first game and its Japanese sequel. They appear underwater where your movement is severely limited, and will move incredibly erratically to the point where its too easy to bump into them and take damage whenever you're trying to sneak by them. And unfortunately for you, they aren't opposed to chasing you either. Funnily enough, the flying variant introduced in the infamously difficult Lost Levels is actually easier to deal with thanks to the fact that since you fight them on land, you can move around properly and thus can bait them into leaving themselves wide open to be jumped on.
    • Super Mario Bros 3, which made Hammer Bros. easier to deal with, ended up with its own example in the form of Boss Bass, a huge fish that would jump out of the water and swallow you whole for a One-Hit Kill, no matter what powerups you were using, and usually appears on levels where the water rises and falls. He could be killed (usually with a block; blocks that can be picked up and thrown often appear in the same levels), but would come back after only, say, ten seconds.
    • The Ninja class enemies in Super Paper Mario (Ninjoe, Ninjohn, and Ninjerry). They have highly erratic movement patterns (which includes jumping), are quick, and can throw shurikens in any direction with next to no warning. And when you finally manage to land an attack on them? They love to disappear, leave behind bombs, and re-appear after the explosion. Unscathed. It is no exaggeration to say that the rooms in either Pit of 100 Trials containing these guys are harder than the rest of them combined.
    • From this hack of Super Mario World played by Raocow, the Koopa Elites. The green ones jump, the red ones shoot fire, the blue ones throw their shells into the air at you and the yellow ones do all that and turn into super fast invincible shells. Then there's the Para versions, which DIVE BOMB Mario and charge all through the air while doing the above.
    • Rip Van Fish in Super Mario World will gladly chase you everywhere and they get quite dangerous in groups or when met with other fish enemies.
    • The Parabones in Super Mario 3D World are the incredibly irritating replacements for the Dry Bones enemy that usually appear in the games. Like their ground-based relatives they are unkillable outside of you stomping on them over a bottomless pit or lava or you using a Starman, but unlike Dry Bones they will relentlessly pursue you and will never stop hounding you. Even worse, they tend to appear in later levels that have you do a lot of careful platforming or riding on platforms with limited room to move around in, so you're in big trouble whenever multiple ones decide to flock on over to you.
  • Banjo-Tooie's Grunty Industries with its MOTHER FARKING TINTOP DRONES. Little mechanical buggers that shock you when they get close and are invincible except for the single second they open their lids every so often. Made even worse by the fact that you can tell if you'll have to deal with them because their corresponding Mook Maker is hard to miss in the rooms, and while you can stop them by shooting out the camera that releases them, some of those cameras are so had to find or even hit that it will often be better to just make a mad dash for the next door than to waste your Grenade Eggs trying to take them out. And they come in droves. Not groups, droves.
  • The Time Trax video game had, well, spiders that would lurk sinisterly in the foreground before pouncing on the playing field. There was no way to tell when they would, it was random, and they were hard to avoid or kill.
  • The Big Eye enemies from the first Mega Man game were the first in a long line of large, jumping enemies that deal a lot of damage if they hit you. They take tons of shots to kill, jump either high or low with no set pattern, and deal a ton of collision damage. And unfortunately, there's at least one in almost every stage, with a whopping three running around the first level of Dr. Wily's robot factory!
    • Returning Sniper Joe from Mega Man 2 is even worse. Much like the other big mid-bosses in the game, it comes with a whopping 20 hit points. It is too large to jump, but itself can do long and low jumps that take 1/3rd of your health from collision damage! Once you take out the armor itself, there's still the regular Sniper Joe left to deal with which has another 10 HP. All in all, this tough as nails mid-boss comes with the same amount of health like a Robot Master. And to top it off, they're everywhere! Unlike other mid-bosses, you can encounter them in packs of two to three armors in the same corridor!... oh and don't even think about using the Metal Blade on them since it merely bounces off of them without inflicting any damage whatsoever. Thankfully, from 3 onwards, the big jumping mid-bosses became much easier to kill from here on out, so it seems that Capcom got the hint.
  • Super Meat Boy is supposed to be Nintendo Hard. But one enemy in the game sticks in the mind of most players...Abbadon. It's also known by some fans as Demon Maw, Munching Missile, and other names. The first part is that they come from a small black portal and make a Scare Chord-like noise when fired. The Demon Maws are pretty big (about the size of 3 Meat Boys standing next to each other), have homing capabilities, and a moderately tight turning radius. But what really makes a Demon Maw a Demonic Spider is that once it hits something, it explodes and splits into 5 or 6 tiny Demon Maws, all flying in different directions. Due to its high flying speed, you'll probably be near it when it explodes. Appropriately enough, this enemy is first seen in the fourth world, which is titled "Hell". And Hell isn't even the hardest world! Wait until you get to Rapture, The End, or *shudder* Cotton Alley...
  • The original Donkey Kong Country, to begin with a tough game in a tough series, features the walking nightmare that are Rock Krocs from "Stop and Go Station". They only appear in one stage and, unlike most other Kremling mooks, never reappear at any later point in the series, and with good reason: they're totally invincible, extremely well-camouflaged, have glowing red eyes that glare at you in the darkness, and when you hear 'em coming... ugh. You can temporarily stun them by turning the green lights red by hitting specific switches throughout the stage, but this never lasts longer than, say, five seconds, and the final stretch of the stage is crawling with them. The stage is so tough and so early in the game, Rare actually included an easy cheat that allows you to skip it outright (by walking left instead of right at the start of the level). You'll miss out on a ton of collectibles, but if you're a kid playing this shit in the nineties, you're going to want to take it.
    • Not quite as bad, but still damn difficult, are the Grey Krushas. They are basically stronger versions of the normal Blue Krusha. The only way to kill them is with a barrel, and if you miss you're screwed. Especially considering the nature of the level (its the last actual level in the game). Unlike the Blue Krushas, Donkey Kong's hand slaps won't even yield a banana from them.
    • And Then there are the Brown Gnawties riding millstones. They are unkillable, even with TNT Barrels, they are large and hard to avoid, and in one level, they actively follow you
  • In Pac-Man World 2, when you're treking through the snowy mountains, Rev-Roll Rams will charge into you, usally knocking onto slippery ice or into a bottomless pit. And even if you avoid their charge, they still have the tendency to travel a very far way. The only way to kill them is a two-step process- rev-rolling into them and butt-bounce on their head, which leaves the player open and takes time, and they love to recover before you can deliver the second attack on them. Nasty things.
  • In the retro-styled freeware game Don't Look Back by Terry Cavanagh, the player must descend into Hell and reclaim his recently deceased wife's soul. On the way there, the player must go through snakes, bats, spiders and other enemies, all of which qualify for this trope (Spiders moreso considering they're actually in Hell, making them quite possibly, real demonic spiders.).
  • The Kirby games feature an enemy called Scarfy, which first appears to be a cute, harmless flying creature. Touching it results in damage, and if you try to inhale it, it chases you before exploding. Some games, such as Kirby 64 make this even worse by having them follow you like Boos when you turn your back to them. The worst part is that these guys have the tendency to fly right into you when they enter the screen.
  • Journey to Silius's third stage has a floating enemy one fan calls "Humpbot" which tends to hover around you causing repeated Collision Damage, and potentially screw up platform jumping and obstacle dodging. Then there's a Mini Boss version in Stage 4 whose head comes off and attacks once you destroy its body.
  • City Connection has that damn smiling, flag-waving Cat, who frequently shows up from nowhere and makes the player lose a life if it is run over. When it appears, chances are the player won't notice quickly enough or is landing from a jump and so can't dodge it. The Cat wants to be hit.
  • Sonic Adventure 2 has Artificial Chaos. When they are not attacking the player with Combat Tentacles that are hard to predict and can stretch a yard away or shooting laser beams which are also hard to dodge, they are hiding its head/weak point inside its gelatinous body which causes any attack you hit it with to bounce off uselessly. This includes Sonic or Shadow whenever they try to do a homing attack too late, which is particularly notable if you're in the middle of a chain of homing attacks over a Bottomless Pit.
  • The Red Archer Fairies in Koumajou Densetsu II's Phantasm stage will make you tear your hair out. How do we hate thee? Let us count the ways: They are very accurate with their arrows, those arrows hurt, and they can keep up quite the rate of fire. They appear in the most annoying places, and usually attack in concert with other enemies whose attacks you also want to avoid, they have this habit of jumping away if you want to kill them with your sword or with a subweapon, and worst of all, they are completely immune to Sakuya's time-stopping ability. Yeah. Have fun.
  • The High Caves level in Spyro the Dragon features huge metal beetles (pictured above) lurking about the eponymous caves. Should Spyro set foot on their ground, the bugs will chase after him like heat-seeking missiles. The only way to defeat the bugs is to run 'em over with supercharge or scorch them with superflame after dashing past several of them to reach that Power-Up.
  • The Combat Tentacles in Ecco the Dolphin. The're large, bodiless tentacles that stick out of walls and grab you and refuse to let go for anything. You can escape with enough charging and fast swimming, but good luck keeping your breath from running out while you do it. And if you're in debug menu invincibility mode, your only choice may be to reset the game entirely or turn off unlimited life so you can die.
  • Distorted Travesty has the Shrouds, which start appearing halfway through the game. Agents of The Darkness that hunt down its enemies, they randomly appear in any level you visit, in some cases even following you from room to room. They always appear in pairs, have enormous amounts of health, their attacks are tough to dodge, their elemental weaknesses change depending on whether they are flying or walking, and their behavior is set up so that they support each other in combat. And if you happen to encounter them while in the midst of a Platform Hell sequence... well, there's always Rave Mode.
  • Claw, being quite a hard game, has its own share of them:
    • Bear Sailor isn't too tough nor does he have some impressive range, but woe is you if you step into this range. To clarify, if they're too close to Claw, they will strangle him. Damage over time created by this is half of his health. Half. It's relatively easy to get out of the grip, but they can repeat it just a second later.
    • Red Tail Pirate isn't too much of a challenge in seventh level when he first appears, but then there are Shipyards and Tiger Islands where he parries pistol shots and sword attacks with near-perfect ratio and making fast counters against your attacks. On smaller ledges, you will get hit at least once.
    • Peg Leg is fragile and more of an annoyance than a real threat in ninth level. Then, level later, he gets better. Now, his combo is two-shots, one high and one low, making it difficult to avoid if you don't pay enough attention. And given plenty of traps trying to kill you in the meantime, you are likely to lose your focus and get stun-locked into death. They also have invinsibility frames sometimes which can trick you into attacking them which will almost certainly cost you another 20 hit points.
    • Nothing beats Tiger Guards though. Tough, agile, dealing ridiculous damage, immune to pistol and dynamite, often paired up with traps and Chameleons... Thankfully they appear only in the final level.