Prince of Persia/YMMV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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  • Author's Saving Throw: The Two Thrones makes an amusing, fairly original and largely effective attempt to turn back from the approach taken by the gratingly Darker and Edgier Warrior Within without the need for a Retcon.
  • Crowning Music of Awesome: All of the games (as well as the movie) have truly remarkable music.
    • The entire soundtrack to Sands of Time, done by multi-instrumentalist Stuart Chatwood with extra help from session musicians. Glad to know his experience with the whole Mideastern-rock fusion thing from his days in The Tea Party was put to very good use.
  • Death of the Hypotenuse:The Two Thrones features Kaileena being killed by the Vizier and becoming the Sands of Time in order to set off the plot make way for Farah. She is revived in the end, and declares that she will now seek out other worlds so that no one can ever abuse the power of the Sands again. This was actually quite well received given that most fans liked Farah better.
  • Game Breaker: In Sands, the wall-bounce can knock down-thus basically killing-just about any enemy. Any enemy it can't take care of is vulnerable to the vaulting attack. Nerfed in the sequels.
  • Genius Bonus: The Forgotten Sands contains several references to King Solomon that seem enormously out of place if you only know him from The Bible. However, in both Jewish and Islamic mythologies, Solomon was a powerful sorcerer. In The Sands of Time, the Prince twice mentions Rostam, a famous hero in Persian mythology.
  • Memetic Mutation: "I smolder with generic rage."
  • Nightmare Fuel: Wonder why the Dahaka scares the Prince so much in Warrior Within? Because not even in his signature ability to rewind time is he safe from it. This is because you can only understand what the Dahaka is saying when he rewinds time.
  • Player Punch: The Prince's father is a boss in Sands of Time. Guess what happens.
  • Polished Port: The SNES version of the original game. Needless to say, this port was by a completely different developer from the one who did the port of its sequel.
  • Porting Disaster: Prince of Persia 2: The Shadow and the Flame on the SNES. as one comment on a youtube put it: