Princess Tomato in the Salad Kingdom: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Vendor Trash]]: Clover and carrots can be picked and sold, but are otherwise useless.
* [[Vendor Trash]]: Clover and carrots can be picked and sold, but are otherwise useless.
* [[Video Game Cruelty Potential]]: "Hit" is one of your options. The game will often [[What the Hell, Player?|chide you]] for attempting to use it on helpful people, but it will occasionally allow you to deck someone for no purpose but your own amusement.
* [[Video Game Cruelty Potential]]: "Hit" is one of your options. The game will often [[What the Hell, Player?|chide you]] for attempting to use it on helpful people, but it will occasionally allow you to deck someone for no purpose but your own amusement.
* [[What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?]]: It gets a lot of this.
* [[What the Hell, Player?]]: ''Loves'' this one. You'll be scolded for everything from trying to "take" people to entering Lisa's room without knocking.
* [[What the Hell, Player?]]: ''Loves'' this one. You'll be scolded for everything from trying to "take" people to entering Lisa's room without knocking.



Revision as of 22:11, 27 January 2018

Princess Tomato in the Salad Kingdom is an obscure 1984 Adventure Game by Hudson Soft, originally released for certain Japanese home computers and later ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System and the Famicom. It stars Sir Cucumber, a knight of King Broccoli, whose kingdom has been usurped by the evil Minister Pumpkin and his cruel farmies. The king charges Sir Cucumber to rescue Princess Tomato and regain the turnip emblem, promising her hand as his reward.

Gameplay alternated between a puzzle Point-and-Click interface, a few mazes, and "battle" sequences that are actually games of Rock-Paper-Scissors. Although a few sequences can leave the player stumped, it's impossible to make the game Unwinnable and only one round of Rock-Paper-Scissors actually has negative consequences for losing. Obscure, quirky, and a bit short, the game's nothing if not unique.

Tropes used in Princess Tomato in the Salad Kingdom include: