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Oh, Tom and Jerry. Not rain nor snow nor a history littered with racially-insensitive
missteps can deter the cartoon violence of a cat and mouse. And not even an absolute
crap platformer, from those bastions of proto-shovelware Hi-Tech Expressions, could stop the antics
of Hanna-Barbera’s most recognizable duo this side of Space Ghost and Zorak. (Fred
Flintsone might object to this statement, but he can shut up until he pays up the twenty
clams he owes me. I’ve got a chowder to make.) Tom and Jerry... wait, and Tuffy? The
hell is a Tuffy? Someone needs to drop the Saved By The Bell font and explain to me,
WHO THE HELL IS TUFFY? A nephew? Who does Jerry think he is, Scrooge McDuck? At least
that was a genuinely good game. This? Well, the second level takes place in a series of
tubes, down which is flushed a blue substance that may or may not be 2000 Flushes. I’ll
leave the rest for you to de-deuce.
If you tilt your head until your neck starts making funny noises, you might - MIGHT - liken
this “The House Is So Huge”-style platformer to a Rescue Rangers or a Little Nemo. But
don’t. Your goal is to get to the “end,” which is usually the upper-rightmost point
in the level, in keeping with standard platformer tradition. Between it and you are hostile
nutcrackers, spiders, flies, snails, squirrels desperate to share their nuts with you, and
every third level, Tom himself, flicking marbles at you or something. That jerk. Your primary
weapon is a supply of... balls. Blue balls, that arc downward and are a right pain to
aim. Occasionally you’ll come upon a... is that a saucepan? Who the heck makes a mouse-sized
saucepan? Nothing here makes sense. Even the audio is just the same track, looped over
and over and over and over again, combined with sound effects that make me all nostalgic
for playing those crappy knock-off Mega Man games on my old Tandy.That’s right, I said
it: MY OLD TANDY.
It’s no secret that, if the game says “Hi-Tech Expressions” on it, chances are your soul
is already forfeit. The best you can hope for is something inoffensive. And, while there’s
plenty of frustration to be had, the game isn’t actually broken or defective, just...
uninspired, derivative, and reliant on a license that was barely relevant then and is even
shakier now. Y’know what? Let Tuffy stay in the attic. We’re just gonna forget about
him anyway. If you’re absolutely dead-set on playing this thing... Eh. Here’s an infinite-lives
code. You’re gonna need it just to deal with the sewage level.