This is an old revision of this page, as edited by
despoa at
2/24/2022 3:53 AM
Obsoletely Fabulous is a page for obsolete movies that are still interesting, whether it be for historical reasons, cool but obsolete exploits, or many other reasons.
For interesting movies that didn't make it to publication, check out
Gruefood Delight.
These movies were significant milestones in the TAS community:
| [668] NES Super Mario Bros. 3 "warps" by Morimoto in 11:03.95 |
---|
| It's 2003. George W. Bush and John Kerry are campaigning for the U.S. presidency, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King is cleaning up at the Oscars, and nobody has heard of a tool-assisted speedrun. This was the movie where it all started – without it, there would be no TASVideos. This movie was painstakingly put together over two years, and it shows: even without frame advance, memory watch, and other tools that modern TASers take for granted, it's still less than forty seconds slower than today's best effort. |
| [436] N64 Super Mario 64 "16 stars" by spezzafer in 16:26.77 |
---|
| This is a classic. The first Nintendo 64 submission to this site, and the first run of one of the most competed and popular games in tool-assisted history. Of particular interest is the MIPS sequence break, whereby Mario can clip through a supposedly impassable door while holding the NPC MIPS. In conjunction with the infamous Backwards Long Jump (BLJ), this enabled completion of the game with just 16 stars, rather than 70 as the designers intended. Nowadays the BLJ alone is sufficient to destroy the game without getting a single star, but, for fans of the rabbit, MIPS abuse lives on in TASes of the DS remake. |
| [1285] SNES Chrono Trigger "save glitch" by inichi in 21:23.98 |
---|
| The godfather of all obsoleted movies, this even won TAS of 2009. The author kept very quiet about this movie, saying only that he was working on a Chrono Trigger improvement, so when it turned out to obsolete its predecessor by four hours (which is still a record), and demonstrate memory corruption techniques that were then unheard of, the community was stunned. Sadly, on top of being obsoleted by a really dull improvement, the tricks used in this TAS have been shown to be the result of poor emulation. |
| [2187] GBC Pokémon: Yellow Version "arbitrary code execution" by bortreb in 12:51.87 |
---|
| Another movie that shook the community, and was a runner-up for TAS of 2012. This movie demonstrated the possibility for a player to corrupt the game to the point where he could inject and run his own code using just the controller buttons. This movie was obsoleted by this one, which corrupts the game far more quickly, but the code that was injected is very different, and both are worth watching. |
These TASes feature a unique form of entertainment:
| [817] SNES Super Metroid "100%" by JXQ in 1:10:45.02 |
---|
| Super Metroid has been through many iterations in many different categories. This one won TAS of 2007, partially because the author went the extra mile with entertainment. Even during cutscenes and scripted sequences, where the player has no control over the game, the author decided to play around with the input such that, when displayed on the screen, it formed amusing animations. This input is visible in the YouTube encode. |
| [1569] DS Brain Age "playaround" by Ryuto in 04:08.10 |
---|
| This TAS has the distinction of being the first playaround TAS ever to be obsoleted. It makes an utter mockery of the game's input recognition system, forcing it to accept meaningless doodles as correct answers to mental arithmetic questions. The author's second version draws more elaborate pictures, but some felt that this made the TAS drag on a little, and the pictures were so well-drawn themselves that they distracted from the point of the run: that the game was recognizing them as numeric characters. |