Actually, I was off by 2 days... I don't go to work today, I would be at school at ten were I not sick, it was saturday that I go in at 10. 😮
Anywho, You want to increase your reaction time? Start playing Stamina Bunny FAST Brawls as Sonic. Set the stamina to 1 and make your enemy a level 9 sonic, I haven't dared add more enemies, It's hard enough to keep up with just two blurs.
And if you really want to go crasy, keep your stamina at 1 but set your enemies at 300. If you can beat that then you will officially be the greatest brawler ever! And for an even harder brawl? Make your character Ganondorf (1 stamina) and your enemy Sonic (300 stamina).
I never knew this:
R.O.B. (Robotic Operating Buddy) is an accessory for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was used in the Robot series. It was released in 1984 in Japan as the Famicom Robot and in 1985 as R.O.B. in North America. It had a short lifespan, with support for only two games, but remains known today for the role it played in getting the Nintendo Entertainment System into retail stores in the United States.
The Robotic Operating Buddy was sold in two packages. One was the NES Deluxe Set, which featured a control deck, the NES Zapper, two controllers, and two games (Duck Hunt and Gyromite). The other package only included R.O.B. and Gyromite. In Japan, the Famicom Robot was sold with Stack-Up. Though it was only compatible with Gyromite and Stack-up, its most successful use was as a "trojan horse" to garner interest following the video game crash of 1983. Retailers, reluctant to stock video games because of huge losses they incurred during the crash, were willing to stock R.O.B. with the NES as a "robot toy." It worked, as retailers stocked the NES, giving Nintendo its first major foothold in the western market.
The R.O.B. functions by receiving commands via optical flashes from a television screen. With the head pointed always at the screen, the arms move left, right, up, and down, and the hands pinch together and separate to manipulate objects on fixtures attached to the base. In Gyromite, one of R.O.B.'s base attachments holds and pushes buttons on an ordinary controller. In Stack-Up the player is supposed to press a button on the controller to indicate when R.O.B. completes a task. While the Robot games were among the most complex of their time, they were reliant upon the honor system in that players could simply press the buttons on the controller themselves without involving R.O.B. at all.
And his picture
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/54/Robotic_Operating_Buddy.jpg
And I also didn't know that he was an unlockable character for Mario cart: DS
I never played it but I'm pretty positive that there was R.O.B. 64 in Starfox 64. As for Wario Ware, I wouldn't know. I just had honestly never seen him as I was too young to pay attention to gaming in the NES days, all I remember is playing The Legend of Zelda with my older brother, and Duck Hunt. I completely missed the N64 also, a fact that I still have never forgiven my parents for. They liked Playstation... the fools.
Okay. I finally completed the SSE recently, while unlocking the last 3 characters in the process (The Great Maze was a pain).
Yeah. I pretty much just took my time.
I won't be playing anymore today (but later), but here's my friend code in advance: 3222-5415-8134
Will add you guys next time I turn on my Wii. 😛
Okay. I've added you 2 now (along with Kapton JAC, Mairuzu, Quincy, Lt. Valerian, and @st). I think that's everyone (if I missed you, go ahead and tell me so I can add you).
Will be looking forward to this as well. 🙂
Oh, and my username on wi-fi is Prime (since they only allow names to be 5 characters long). xd