Ghoul School

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Ghoul School is an early entry in the survival-horror genre of video games having been released on the Nintendo Entertainment System in the year of 1992. It was developed by Imagineering and produced by Electrobrain.

You play as Spike O'Hara, a delinquent from Cool School (which later gets turned into GHOUL SCHOOL! ...ya, get it?) who comes across a magical skull which keeps growing bigger. He decides to give it to Dr. Femur in the science lab at school for studying. The next day, he returns to find that the school is overrun by monsters.

Spike must travel through over 200 rooms in the school looking for items in order to save Samantha Pom-Pom. The school cheerleader and Spike's secret crush.

In the end, the game comes off like a B Horror Movie with no script, and remains a Cult Classic for the few gamers who've heard of it.

It was infamous for its buggy controls, poor hit detection, and weird set-up. The game had a lot of Guide Dang It moments including the elevator sequence and the basketballs in the gymnasium.

Tropes used in Ghoul School include:
  • All There in the Manual: If you don't have the manual, then you won't get the story behind it. The game goes immediately from title screen to the start of the game.
  • Always Save the Girl:
  • Back Tracking: An annoying amount. Because you won't know where to go without a walkthrough, you're bound to do a lot more than is necessary too.
  • Big Bad: Cornea King.
  • Boss in Mooks Clothing: The Frankenstein's Monster. Some other one-time regular monsters like Bootoven and Note-orious culd qualify. Due to their uniqueness though, it'd be hard to classify them as regular enemies.
  • Cut and Paste Environments
  • Die TV Set Die: In the classrooms are tvs you can smash in to get apples that restore health points.
  • Everything's Better with Monkeys: Averted. The game actually goes out of its way to make the Grease Monkeys in the school garage a very difficult to avoid hazard.
  • Gravity Barrier: Crates, walls, ...very early on too.
  • Guide Dang It: Quite a bit to the point where it seems like the whole game is a physical manifestation of this trope.
    • The aforementioned elevator shaft for one example.
  • Haunted House: Cool School.
  • I Coulda Been a Contender: This could apply to the game itself as the interview (see What Could Have Been in the Trivia section) seems to signify that this was a labor of love, but it got swept to the way-side due to executive meddling, hardware restrictions, bad programming choices, etc.
  • Lethal Joke Item: The... sandwich.
  • Magnet Hands: Even when Spike flips himself upside down to walk on the ceiling those guns/baseball bat/wet towel/... sandwich don't leave his hands.
  • Meaningful Name/Punny Name: Dr. Femur is a school scientist who studies bones. Spike O'Hara has... spiky hair. Samantha Pom-Pom is a cheerleader. Cornea King is a giant eyeball creature. The trope even applies to many enemy names as well.
  • Metroidvania: One of the earliest examples, long before this genre had an actual name.
  • Misaimed Realism: Jump physics are made to be a little too realistic, but hit detection is not. Put the two and two together and...
  • Missing Floor: There's no real connection between the left and right halves of the school. The only way to get to said other half is by getting on the roof via the aforementioned elevator event.
  • Palette Swap: Not quite in the way one may think, but many enemies are very similar to each with a change in attire and in behavior (i.e. Optik, Blinky, Dumb-Bell, Grouchy Gore-Met and Quarter-Pound). Basically, any of the enemies belonging to the giant eyeball class of monsters.
  • Side View
  • A Winner Is You: You battle through a school full of monsters to rescue the girl and then... as you're watching the aftermath of the adventure: SHE STEPS AWAY FROM YOU. Uh-huh. That's right. You do all the work and you don't even get the girl in the end.