Spiritual Warfare: Difference between revisions

Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9)
prefix>Import Bot
(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.SpiritualWarfare 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.SpiritualWarfare, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
(Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v2.0beta9))
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{tropework}}
Spiritual Warfare was an unlicensed Christian video game released in 1992 by Wisdom Tree, primarily for the [[NES]], though also sold for other systems such as the [[Game Boy]]. In it, the player plays a young Christian whose town has been overrun by demons, causing innocent townsfolk to become corrupted. The gameplay and graphics were amazingly simplistic for its release year, being an 8-bit title in a time when the 16-bit generation was gaining popularity. It used the same engine as [[Bible Buffet]] before it, but minus the board game elements of that game.
 
Line 6:
Apart from collecting this fruit, the player also collects the Armour of God, in six pieces, to prepare for the final confrontation with the "ultimate source of evil" in the character's town, and other biblical items, such as the Jawbone of Samson and Anointing Oil.
 
Encyclopedia Obscura has a [httphttps://wwwweb.archive.org/web/20130901131904/http://encyclopedia-obscura.com/gamessw.html review of the game] handy, and Syd Lexia has a more in-depth review [http://www.sydlexia.com/vald/spiritual_warfare.htm here].
 
{{tropelist}}
----
 
* [[Convection, Schmonvection]]: The boiling lava in the Demon's Lair poses no threat whatsoever; you can't even fall in.
=== This game provides examples of: ===
* [[Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?]]: Defeating Satan, the game's [[Final Boss]].
 
* [[Convection Schmonvection]]: The boiling lava in the Demon's Lair poses no threat whatsoever; you can't even fall in.
* [[Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu]]: Defeating Satan, the game's [[Final Boss]].
* [[Edible Ammunition]]: Pear, pomegranate, apple, grape, and banana serve as the player's primary weapon; they are are referred to in-game as the "Fruit of the Holy Spirit".
* [[Follow the Leader]]: To Nintendo's original ''[[The Legend of Zelda]]''.
Line 19 ⟶ 17:
* [[Heart Container]]
* [[Holy Hand Grenade]]: Vials of "God's Wrath" function as bombs, demolishing terrain and, ahem, blasting the "[[Incredibly Lame Pun|Hell]]" out of any nearby sinners.
* [[Infinity Plus One+1 Sword]]: The Sword of Spirit works much like the sword beams from ''Zelda'', only you don't need full life to use them, and they EXPLODE when they hit something. Suffice to say that once you get this, you're pretty much done flinging fruit at people.
* [[Kung Fu -Proof Mook]]: Stray dogs and wild animals cannot be defeated with any weapon, and must simply be avoided. Likewise, the traffic in the Residential area and the forklifts in the Warehouse sector.
** The strongmen on the beach are immune to fruit of the spirit; it harmlessly bounces off of them. They are not, however, immune to any holy 'splosions. Adjust your strategy as needed.
* [[Metroidvania]] / [[Plot Coupon That Does Something]]: Acquiring pieces of the "Armor of God" grants the player new abilities which, for the most part, enable them to access the next area.
* [[The Moral Substitute]]: Sure, it's a Christianity-themed clone of ''Zelda'', but it's [[Tropes Are Not Bad|still pretty enjoyable by virtue of copying one of the most beloved adventure games of all time]].
* [[Pop Quiz]]: Roaming angels ask [[The Bible|Bible]]-related questions of the player.
* [[Precision -Guided Boomerang]]: The "Jawbone of Samson". (For those in the know, it's not Samson's own jaw, but from an animal he killed. ''With his bare hands''.)
* [[The Very Definitely Final Dungeon]]: The foreboding architecture of the "Demon's Lair", located underneath the prison.
* [[Warp Whistle]]: The "RR Ticket" allows the player to use the train stations.
Line 31 ⟶ 29:
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Spiritual Warfare]]
[[Category:TropePages needing more categories]]
[[Category:Christian Media]]