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Except for one thing: its [[Nintendo Hard|sadistic level of difficulty]].
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The spelunker himself can die very easily from a wide variety of things, including some you wouldn't expect:
* His own dynamite, of which the blast radius isn't actually visible (the entire screen flashes white when it goes off).
* Any enemy.
* Bat droppings.
* Falling in a small pit that's less than one half the already small safe fall distance.
* His own flare landing on top of him on the way down.
* Most infamously of all, falling less than his own height
** And what's worse, when you're on a rope or a ladder, if you push left or right, you can actually slide off and end up dying in midair before you had a chance to jump off! The computer originals, mercifully, allowed jumping off of ladders and ropes safely by holding jump and tapping the stick, a luxury not allowed on the NES version.
That one involving falling is particularly nasty, due to the game's play mechanics. The spelunker can only jump a short distance, can't change his direction in midair, and falls straight down instead of slightly forward when walking off an edge. Your jumps must be very precise, or you will die from the fall
The game was widely forgotten in America, where it was created, but became a [[Cult Classic]] in Japan due to its hilariously unforgiving difficulty and ludicrous number of ways to die. The game ended up being returned to used video game stores in high numbers when players got frustrated with it, but later developed a following among fans of [[Nintendo Hard]] games. As a result, there have been several Japanese fangames, and even a remake for Playstation Network in the form of ''Spelunker HD'', which adds multiplayer play and cartoony animations mocking the deaths, but also adds a lot of lives and a save feature to soften the blow.
The game actually inspired a Japanese expression
{{tropelist}}
* [[A Winner Is You]]: Expected in the NES version. Incredibly aggravating in ''Spelunker HD'' when you've just gone through 100 levels of [[Platform Hell]] to get there.▼
* [[The Anime of the Game]]: Titled ''Spelunker is a Teacher'', it's basically about the hijinks of the titular character as a teacher in a Japanese school. Some tropes associated with the anime:
** [[Gratuitous English]]: The opening theme, possibly a shout-out for Spelunker's American origin.
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* [[Cartoon Bomb]]: These can be used.
* [[Everything Trying to Kill You]]: Ghosts, burst of steam, own bombs, fall traps, you name it.
* [[Evil Twin]]
* [[Have a Nice Death]]
* [[Nintendo Hard]]
* [[Nostalgia Level]]
* [[One-Hit-Point Wonder]]: And boy is the protagonist quite a wonder.
* [[Respawn Point]]
▲** To elaborate, the NES version has vanishing ground that drops you to your death, secret powerups that can get you killed, invisible keys on the second loop, and lets you kill yourself by jumping while walking down a slope. ''Spelunker HD'' takes all of these and makes them even worse.
* [[Retraux]]
▲* [[Respawn Point]] - The last place you picked up an "important item." Since most "important items" are at the end of long corridors filled with death, this forces you to go through the corridor 'again' every time you die.
▲* [[Retraux]] - ''Spelunker HD'' includes a "classic graphics" mode, which mimics the look and sound of the NES version, even though it also contains a lot of new content.
* [[Secret Level]]
▲* [[Ruins for Ruins Sake]] - Several levels in ''Spelunker HD''.
* [[Spiritual Successor]]
▲* [[Secret Level]] - There are two exits from Stage 99 ... one of which requires an additional key not found in the stage. At least, not found in ''Stage 99'' ...
▲* [[Spiritual Successor]] - ''[[Spelunky]]'', which has the same premise and hatred toward the player, but with [[Randomly Generated Levels]] and more features in general.
* [[Video Game Remake]]
▲* [[Underground Level]] - The entire game.
▲* [[A Winner Is You]]: Expected in the NES version. Incredibly aggravating in ''Spelunker HD'' when you've just gone through 100 levels of [[Platform Hell]] to get there.
▲* [[Video Game Remake]] - ''Spelunker HD'', which expands the game's original 6 levels to 100 levels, including a separate set of 100 multiplayer-only levels, while also adding new types of environments.
* [[With Lyrics]]
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Arcade Game]]
[[Category:Platform Game]]
▲[[Category:Play Station 3]]
▲[[Category:Commodore 64]]
[[Category:Atari 8 Bit Computers]]
[[Category:
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[[Category:Nintendo Entertainment System]]
[[Category:PlayStation 3]]
[[Category:Video Games of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Older Than the NES]]
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