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NES Works returns to its regularly scheduled, uh, schedule here with episode 120, which covers a game I have a lot of fondness for: Adventures of Lolo. HAL Labs made some great games back in the day, and buying a copy of this one from my local rental shop (who would put used rentals on sale for hilariously good prices after a few months) back in the day cemented that logo into my brain as an instant endorphin trigger, long before Kirby and Smash Bros. It probably also explains why I was actually excited to tackle my first Soukoban port for Game Boy Works back in the day. Little did I know that Soukoban is always Soukoban, but Lolo is Soukoban evolved.

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Soukoban is hell, unless it's HAL: The Adventures of Lolo | NES Works 120

HAL Labs has been a regular fixture of NES Works nearly from the beginning thanks to their valuable behind-the-scenes contributions to games like Pinball, Golf, and Balloon Fight. And we saw a few self-published HAL titles back in 1988, though those amounted to simple ports of golden age arcade machines. Here, with Adventures of Lolo, we finally have a proper top-to-bottom self-published HAL original... and it's pretty great. You could be unkind and reduce Adventures of Lolo down to "Soukoban, but...," though that misses out on the fact that the "but..." is what sets this game apart. With real-time action and 50 stages of devastatingly crafted box-pushing puzzles beset by a variety of monsters cleverly designed and placed to both hinder and help protagonist Lolo (but mostly hinder), this is the first glimpse we've had of the fact that HAL could design good games rather than simply help others program them. Production notes: Video Works is funded via Patreon (http://www.patreon.com/gamespite) — support the show and get access to every episode up to two weeks in advance of its YouTube debut! Plus, exclusive podcasts, eBooks, and more! Why watch when you can read? Check out the massive hardcover print editions of NES Works, Super NES Works, and Virtual Boy works, available now at Limited Run Games (https://limitedrungames.com/collections/books)! SG-1000 Works: Segaiden Vol. I is available NOW, and Metroidvania: The First Decade is due in 2024. NES footage captured from Analogue Nt Mini. Video upscaled to 720 with xRGB Mini Framemeister. "Before the Storm" courtesy of Jacob Le.

Comments

Paul Schroeder

The sheer quickness in which the medusas hand out a death might have been the first real jump scare I experienced on NES.

TheLupineOne

As many Nintendo Power column inches as Hydlide and Amagon? Ouch. Lolo definitely deserved better.