Shovelware you unironically love

Leguminoso

Paladin Knight
Level 1
51%
Joined
Dec 18, 2024
Messages
63
Level up in
37 posts
Reaction score
120
Points
1,327
The Nintendo Wii was an absolute magnet for absolute garbage. The bargain bins of the late 2000s were overflowing with rushed movie tie-ins, broken motion-control minigame collections, and weirdly specific simulator games.

Why? Because Nintendo was traumatized by the Gamecube underselling, so they started selling devkits to everyone and their mother. Result? Tons and tons of shovelwares.

But first, we must talk about the definition. What is a shovelware? Well, this refers to low-quality and low-effort games that are rapidly "shoveled" onto storefronts solely to make a quick buck.

But if you dug deep enough, you occasionally found absolute gold. Games that were made to be a quick buck, but had absolute high quality animations, music, graphics, etc.

Speed Racer: The Videogame
SpeedRacerVideogamePoster.webp

Movie tie-in games are the textbook definition of shovelware, and the 2008 Wachowski Speed Racer movie was already a polarizing, neon-soaked fever dream. But the Wii game? It is literally a Need for Speed and Mario Kart clone that is absolutely awesome.

It completely bypassed realistic racing physics and went straight into what they call "car fu." You are constantly spinning, flipping, and slamming into opponents at 400 MPH on tracks that look like rollercoasters designed by a madman. Using the Wii Remote to pull off spin attacks and drifts felt surprisingly tight. It captured the chaotic energy of the movie perfectly.

Wipeout: The Game
BirdHatJumpButton_610x458.webp


Yes, the one based on the ABC game show where people get smashed by balls. In reality, it was a stupid fun couch multiplayer game. The ragdoll physics were hilarious. Trying to time your jumps with motion controls while your friends shouted at you and threw things at you made for some of the best weekend gaming sessions. It was janky but the sheer absurdity of watching your character get absolutely launched by a sweeper arm never got old.

Go Vacation
81qUiDmsW3L.jpg

Calling this one shovelware might be a stretch because Namco made it, but it definitely suffered from "just another Wii sports". But Go Vacation was secretly awesome.

Instead of just picking a sport from a menu, you got dropped into a massive open world with four distinct resorts (Marine, Mountain, Snow, City). You could explore the entire island on inline skates, jet skis, skis, or horses, discovering hidden chests and unlocking villas. It had over 50 minigames. To me, this was pretty much Wii Sports 2.5, because it had an actual open world; I always wanted to explore Wuhu Island on foot, this game gave me that.
 
Now... when you say Shovel....
I think of something... Different...
1784305158274.png
 
Escape from Bug Island and Domino Rally are two of my favorite Wii "shovelware" games.
 
The Nintendo Wii was an absolute magnet for absolute garbage. The bargain bins of the late 2000s were overflowing with rushed movie tie-ins, broken motion-control minigame collections, and weirdly specific simulator games.

Why? Because Nintendo was traumatized by the Gamecube underselling, so they started selling devkits to everyone and their mother. Result? Tons and tons of shovelwares.

But first, we must talk about the definition. What is a shovelware? Well, this refers to low-quality and low-effort games that are rapidly "shoveled" onto storefronts solely to make a quick buck.

But if you dug deep enough, you occasionally found absolute gold. Games that were made to be a quick buck, but had absolute high quality animations, music, graphics, etc.

Speed Racer: The Videogame
View attachment 212109
Movie tie-in games are the textbook definition of shovelware, and the 2008 Wachowski Speed Racer movie was already a polarizing, neon-soaked fever dream. But the Wii game? It is literally a Need for Speed and Mario Kart clone that is absolutely awesome.

It completely bypassed realistic racing physics and went straight into what they call "car fu." You are constantly spinning, flipping, and slamming into opponents at 400 MPH on tracks that look like rollercoasters designed by a madman. Using the Wii Remote to pull off spin attacks and drifts felt surprisingly tight. It captured the chaotic energy of the movie perfectly.

Wipeout: The Game
View attachment 212110

Yes, the one based on the ABC game show where people get smashed by balls. In reality, it was a stupid fun couch multiplayer game. The ragdoll physics were hilarious. Trying to time your jumps with motion controls while your friends shouted at you and threw things at you made for some of the best weekend gaming sessions. It was janky but the sheer absurdity of watching your character get absolutely launched by a sweeper arm never got old.

Go Vacation
View attachment 212113
Calling this one shovelware might be a stretch because Namco made it, but it definitely suffered from "just another Wii sports". But Go Vacation was secretly awesome.

Instead of just picking a sport from a menu, you got dropped into a massive open world with four distinct resorts (Marine, Mountain, Snow, City). You could explore the entire island on inline skates, jet skis, skis, or horses, discovering hidden chests and unlocking villas. It had over 50 minigames. To me, this was pretty much Wii Sports 2.5, because it had an actual open world; I always wanted to explore Wuhu Island on foot, this game gave me that.

Nice work! Thx for digging through the shovelware for us!
 
As someone who didn't have access to a credit or debit card as a kid, I needed to buy those $20 PlayStation Store cards to get a lot of things... And the way that usually broke down, that meant a $15 major DLC, and $5 to use the best I could. That category got me some trash, but some of it was surprisingly good:

- Who's That Flying?! by Mediatonic is a fun combination of a tower defense and a scrolling shooter where you defend several cities from an invading alien menace, with a short but fun story experience as well as endless play options.
- One Epic Game is a simple endless runner - you can jump, you can shoot. That is all. But it's still entertaining to try to high distances in, and the brief story mode is a fun shakeup of the mechanics. Soundtrack is good too!
- N.O.V.A. is about as "we have Halo at home" as you can get... But hey, we genuinely didn't have Halo at the time! Finally a space shooter I can have on my Vita too! (Which is also what drove me to play Section 8 and its sequel Prejudice... Do they count?)

Then obviously there's no shortage of other handheld dreck-to-gold:

- What's this, the fifth time I've asked if Egg Mania counts as a cheap, shovelware, underrated, etc. game? Go play Egg Mania!
- Shrek 2 on GBA is a nice puzzle platformer for the kiddies. It's no prizewinner, but it has this weird charm to its gameplay and music that keeps me occasionally revisiting it.
- The Grinch on GBC is no slouch - it's a Konami game, and it dumps all over the PS1 title by using art and plot more reminiscent of the original storybook, and the gameplay is a thrilling timed stealth collectathon adventure across a slew of challenging levels.
- The Yu-Gi-Oh! games on GBA are a mixed bag of experiences: Destiny Board Traveler is genuinely shovelware junk, but then there's an ascending set of duel sims like Eternal Duelist Soul and Stairway to the Destined Duel that offer a great breakdown of the classic pre-GoaT duel gameplay, The Sacred Cards and Reshef of Destruction take a crack at an RPG setting (being too easy and too hard respectively, and with flawed mechanics, but still pretty fun), and Dungeon Dice Monsters is pretty much the only way to experience that alternate property these days.
- Shaman King: Master of Spirits is great for those of you who love GBA Castlevania but have played the trilogy to death and just need more.
- The first Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku is as bad a game as you can get... The sequels II and Buu's Fury are the exact opposite. You get to really sink your teeth into the Android + Cell Saga and Majin + Buu Saga respectively, powering up your protagonists, exploring the world, doing side quests, and jamming to mixes of the Falconer OST that sound better than his own renditions... Dragon Ball tends to do better than other licenses for this category, but I'll get real here: I would rather play these two games than any Budokai, Kakarot, or even FighterZ any day.
 
- N.O.V.A. is about as "we have Halo at home" as you can get... But hey, we genuinely didn't have Halo at the time! Finally a space shooter I can have on my Vita too! (Which is also what drove me to play Section 8 and its sequel Prejudice... Do they count?)
THIS. I wanted to play a shooter on psp and I found this one, and I liked it.
 
I like many Simple Series games just because they are... well, simple. They are usually built around one concept and don't have any bloat, which makes them very easy to pick up whenever you feel like it and not feel guilty for abandoning them after. I think my favorites are Party Girls, Fighting Angels and Yakuza Fury.
 
Open Season for GBA, i expected it to be the same drek the usual uninspired Licensed game was at the time, but played it out of it being a gift, the game... still not a masterpiece, but it is a good platformer
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Connect with us

Support this Site

RGT relies on you to stay afloat. Help covering the site costs and get some pretty Level 7 perks too.

Featured Video

Latest Threads

Rental store artifacts

7 labels affixed to this Sega Genesis cart by Blockbuster Video. Feels a bit excessive...
Read more

Is Starting a Gaming Channel Still Worth It?

Hey, I've had this question in my mind for a few months... or maybe even years.
Sometimes I...
Read more

Do you have any "useless" skills?

What are some skills you have that are practically useless to you in your life?

For me, I can...
Read more

If Jurassic Park was real...

Like anyone who watched JP when they were kids, I was absolutely mesmerized by it.

I even...
Read more

PSX emulator for TV Android 9

Hello everyone,

I have just built a PSX emulator app for Android 9 TV that supports...
Read more

Online statistics

Members online
223
Guests online
4,069
Total visitors
4,292

Forum statistics

Threads
21,410
Messages
540,691
Members
985,270
Latest member
GoGoGodzilla

Today's birthdays

Advertisers

Back
Top