The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie - Walkthrough. Plus, this game shows how the Spongebob games, in general, have progressed through the couple of years that they have been made. Nov 24, 2017 The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie Game ( #SpongeBob #Longplay #100% ) If you feel like donating, 100% of the donations will be for buying more games to do longplays of.
- The Spongebob Movie Game Pc Download
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/TheSpongeBobMovieGame
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The video game adaptation of The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, made by the same company as Battle for Bikini Bottom (thus as a result uses the same engine). The plot more or less follows the film, but with a few changes made. While David Hasselhoff makes a guest appearance in the movie, the game doesn't actually refer to him by name.
The Spongebob Movie Game Pc Download
There was also a PC version made, and it was a Point and Click Adventure game (modeled after Employee of the Month), as well as a GBA version, which was for the most part a 2D Platformer.
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Contains examples of:
- Absurdly High Level Cap: The max amount of Manliness Points you can hold after getting all upgrades is 99,999, but getting to this Cap is easier said than done and requires A LOT of effort, time, and patience due to Anti-Grinding being in effect.
- Adaptation Expansion: Quite a few instances:
- The original movie barely spends a minute on Spongebob and Patrick in the desert before the action turns to the Thug Tug. In the game, the desert takes up two whole levels, the plot of which is pretty much made out of whole cloth.
- There is no junkyard sequence in the original movie; our heroes are confronted by Dennis immediately after leaving the Trench.
- The PC version plays this even straighter, having three chapters that were never featured in the original movie. One chapter is dedicated to Mindy escaping Neptune's castle so she can find SpongeBob and Patrick and warn them of Plankton's scheme. One chapter completely omits the Trench and the monsters altogether and replaces them with the foggy abyssal plains, where the entire plot is focused on solving a mystery at a hotel in the middle of nowhere in order to obtain a key item and return it to a cave. And finally, one chapter features a strike being orchestrated by invertebrates because they can't see a chiropractor, and the plot is essentially trying to make peace with them and the vertebrates. At least Mindy's chapter makes a little sense because it's shown in the movie that she got to SpongeBob and Patrick by carriage, implying that to be the case, but the other two have no relation to the movie (or even the overall plot) whatsoever.
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- Adapted Out: In the movie, Mindy gave SpongeBob and Patrick a bag of wind that they can use to get back to Bikini Bottom. This was removed in the game.
- Adaptational Villainy:
- It's understandable for Plankton's bucketheads to be Mooks, but that certainly doesn't explain why the Goofy Goober's staff is downright homicidal (though concept art packaged into the game shows there were plans to make them mind-controlled, too).
- Played even straighter with the monsters of the Trench - most of them are very much hostile, and instead of winning their friendship through a big song-and-dance number, Spongebob and Patrick resort to the tried-and-true tactic of beating the crap out of them.
- Airborne Mook: The Flinger and MERV enemies.
- All Your Base Are Belong to Us: Much like in the movie, Plankton takes over Bikini Bottom. Only this time it happens earlier, with Plankton statues and monuments being put as SpongeBob and Patrick escape town.
- Anti-Climax:
- The fourth and final arena level can qualify as this, where unlike the previous arena, full of dangerous enemies and was extremely difficult with the highest amount of waves, only has a single jellyfish to defeat. See Joke Level.
- Remember the scene where SpongeBob destroys Plankton's bucket helmets as a guitar-playing wizard? The PC version lacks this climax. Instead, you just play a bunch of off-tune notes on some guitar strings and you just win.
- Anti-Grinding: In order to prevent excessive farming of Manliness Points in each level for upgrades, the value of Manliness Points you receive from enemies, crates, and combos will drop over time until it eventually reaches a point where everything is just worth one Manliness Point, prompting the player to proceed to the next level at a steady pace.
- Subverted in Bubble Blowing Baby Hunt, where all the enemies (albeit logically) drop much more manliness points than enemies from any other level, though the value still drops over time.
- Arrow Cam: Much like the Cruise Bubble, SpongeBob's Sonic Wave Guitar attack also functions this way by having the camera shift to the sonic wave's point-of-view during flight, allowing you to steer it into your intended target for no less than five seconds. When upgraded, the Sonic Wave Guitar gains an ability to home in on the target by pressing the same attack button again if it's highlighted by a yellow targeting square.
- Attack Reflector:
- With SpongeBob's and Patrick's upgraded Spin Attacks, certain enemies like the Flingers, Turrets, and Poppers can be defeated this way by reflecting their projectiles back at them.
- Curiously enough, the only one immune to this is the Frogfish boss; the alternate phase where it fires the blue projectile slops at you can be reflected like so, but it won't inflict any damage to it.
- Backtracking: The game forces this on you whenever you reach a new level and don't have enough Goofy Goober Tokens to gain a new move from Mindy needed to clear the level, prompting you to backtrack to previous levels for Tokens you've missed earlier. There are also certain Tokens and Treasure Chests in earlier levels which cannot be reached until Patrick gets his Throw move and SpongeBob gets his Sonic Wave Guitar.
- Badass Driver: SpongeBob and Patrick in the stages where you drive the Patty Wagon.
- Bad-Guy Bar: The Thug Tug in the Bubble Blowing Baby Hunt level.
- Big Door: The Welcome to Planktopolis.. Minions level has a few.
- Bleak Level: Any level from Bubble Blowing Baby Hunt onwards noticeably has more darker and unsettling environments.
- Bonus Stage: The SpongeBall, Floating Block, and Combat Arena Challenges are special stages that can be entered via special panels you find throughout the levels.
- Boss Arena Idiocy: The final boss King Neptune would be invincible if it weren't for the conveniently-placed tables around the Krusty Krab II.
- Boss-Only Level: I'll Let You Pet Mr. Whiskers, Name's Dennis, Dennis Strikes Back, and Turn the Tables on Plankton.
- Bowled Over: SpongeBob's SpongeBowl attack allows him to bowl over enemies or objects in his way using a literal bowling ball. And when upgraded, the bowling ball becomes a spiked ball that emits an electrical discharge to harm any enemy or object within its vicinity.
- Call-Back: a robot from Battle for Bikini Bottom appears as trash at the beginning of Shell City, Dead Ahead.
- SpongeBob refers to himself as 'SuperSponge' in one quote, which is the name of another SpongeBob game.
- Casual Danger Dialog: SpongeBob and Pat have no problems acting manly and spouting cheery one-liners even in the most dangerous situations.
- Composite Character:
- Patrick has most of his moves from Battle for Bikini Bottom, but he also has Sandy's ability to jump over large gaps by latching onto something (in this case, ice blocks with his tongue).
- Flingers are a mixture of the flying enemies from 'Battle for Bikini Bottom', but they spit out slippy liquid like Slick.
- Concert Climax: SpongeBob stages one in the Krusty Krab for the final boss.
- Convenient Enemy Base: SpongeBob and Patrick land near the Krusty Krab after escaping Shell City.
- Crate Expectations: Plankton's Plan Z Supply Crates, which give out Manliness Points when destroyed. There are five types of them in the game: a Wooden Crate, a Floating Box, a ThunderBarrel, a Plan Z Computernote , and a Steel Safenote . Sound familiar? That's because they're clearly based off the Tikis from Battle for Bikini Bottom.
- Damn You, Muscle Memory!: Most apparent if you are switching over from Battle for Bikini Bottom to this or vice versa, since both games play similarly to each other. Because of this, sometimes you'll forget that some of SpongeBob's and Patrick's moves are either reassigned to a different button on your controller or are completely replaced with an entirely new move.
- Death Mountain: Rub a Dub Dub, Slip Slide in a Tub.
- Demoted to Extra: Sandy, after being a playable character in the previous game, is reduced to a single cameo late in the game here. Justified in that she had a very minor role in the movie itself.
- Disney Death: The Tearjerking scene where SpongeBob and Patrick dry out under a lamp is still here, but reduced to a cutscene with more comedy and no suspense whatsoever.
- Down in the Dumps: Shell City, Dead Ahead.
- Dream Land: No Cheese respectively since it is SpongeBob's dream of becoming a manager like in the movie. Sundae Driving also qualifies.
- Early-Bird Cameo: The Combat Arena Challenges scattered around the levels use the enemy designs from the following level rather than the current - for example, the Combat Arena Challenge in Bubble Blowing Baby Hunt features the monster enemies found in Now That We're Men rather than the thugs. Played with in the first Combat Arena Challenge, which features both the redneck enemies from 3000 Miles to Shell City and the waiters from I'm Ready, Depression. Used to parodying effect in the final Combat Arena Challenge, where, with no more enemies to use, Patrick will fight a lone jellyfish.
- Egopolis: Welcome to Planktopolis.. Minions. Overlaps with Doomed Hometown.
- Elite Mooks: The MERV enemies found later in the game (akin to the Sleepy-Time robots in Battle for Bikini Bottom). They're usually found hovering around areas often accompanied by other Mooks and will shoot a laser at you if you get too close. The only way to take them out is by long-range attacks like the Throw and Sonic Wave Guitar (using the Sponge Bowl will cause them like with the aforementioned Sleepy-Time, to laser the ball off course). A later variant found in Welcome to Planktopolis.. Minions can fire rockets at you from a distance that split into smaller ones.
- Evil Laugh: All nearby enemies laugh at you briefly If you take damage.
- Experience Points: A non-RPG example in the form of Manliness Points, which are used to upgrade SpongeBob's and Patrick's health and abilities. While not mandatory, it is recommended to collect them as they'll be really helpful in making tough sections easier with upgrades. Manliness Points can be found scattered around the level, as well as earned by destroying crates, defeating enemies, and scoring smash combos. However there is a certain limit to the amount of Manliness Points you can earn the longer you stay in the same level. See Anti-Grinding above.
- Expy: The enemies are, for the most part, expies of the robots from Battle for Bikini Bottom. All of the Plan Z Boxes are also similar to a type of Tiki from the same game: There's a standard one, a floating one, one that disappears if you get too close (which sadly, cannot be sneaked up on by SpongeBob), an exploding one, and one immune to regular attacks.
- Flunky Boss: Dennis is this in both forms, as well as King Neptune after taking a few hits.
- Gameplay and Story Segregation: A minor instance, caused by the above Adaptation Expansion. The story bits (told through screencaps and dialogue) follow the movie as closely as possible, but the gameplay of several levels revolves around destroying various devices Plankton has set up to facilitate his mind-control helmets. In the movie, and the game's corresponding story bits, Spongebob and Patrick don't learn about Plankton's mind-control plot until they've come to the Trench.
- Getting Crap Past the Radar: Patrick's butt bounce move is called the '[dolphin noise] Smash'.
- The Goomba: The Jellyfish, which are the easiest enemies to beat and will not necessarily hurt you unless you touch them directly. Unlike their variants in Battle for Bikini Bottom, this time they do offer points when defeated.
- Ground Pound: Patrick's Smash attack, also named the '[dolphin noise] Smash' by Mindy, allows him to slam onto enemies or objects from the air with hisbutt. And when upgraded, the attack becomes a Face Plant that creates a shockwave to stun any nearby enemies, allowing Patrick to pick them up with his Throw attack once he gains it.
- Guide Dang It!: Indeed, some of the Treasure Chests will invoke this on players who are aiming to find all of them so here are a few notable examples:
- In Three.. Thousand Miles to Shell City, one Treasure Chest spawns in the Bungee cave if you bash the floating boxes right next to the stacked crates in numerical order. Alternatively, if you have the upgraded Bash attack, then you can use it on either the second or third floating boxes from the entrance and then detonate it.
- In Now That We're Men, remember the series of Plan Z crates at the beginning of the level across the huge lava pit that you thought was inaccessible? You have to destroy all of them in one go with a well-targeted Sonic Wave Guitar to a specific thunder barrel. A Treasure Chest will appear if you succeed.
- In Shell City, Dead Ahead, one Treasure Chest will only appear if you hit all the toasts sticking out of the toasters in the background, something that you would never think to do because of that alone. One toaster near the beginning can be hit with Patrick's Throw attack while the other two can only be hit with SpongeBob's Sonic Wave Guitar.
- In Welcome to Planktopolis.. Minions, it turns out that the geysers blocked by steel safes at the beginning of the level really hinted at something. If you look up, you'll see that the geysers align with a well-hidden SpongeBowl wheel that seems to be out-of-reach. The trick here is to use the SpongeBowl over the geysers so they can propel it upward towards the wheel (that activates a crane lift). Doing so will reveal a Treasure Chest that was hidden underneath it.
- Hailfire Peaks: Can be invoked in Now That We're Men and Welcome to Planktopolis.. Minions if you use a Freezy Fruit to temporarily freeze the lava into solid ice.
- Heads I Win, Tails You Lose: Zig-zagged for the frogfish and Dennis (both times). All the damage done to them is rendered moot in the cutscenes, but those same cutscenes turn around and hand them their movie-canon defeats. Averted with King Neptune.
- Hoist by His Own Petard: Comes into play during King Neptune's boss fight, where the only way to damage him is to redirect his laser right back at him using the flipped tables scattered around the Krusty Krab II. This stuns him and allows you to lay a direct hit with SpongeBob's Sonic Wave Guitar.
- Human Hammer-Throw: When upgraded, Patrick's Throw attack has the capability of doing this to any enemy he's picked up after being stunned with his Smash attack. By holding the same attack button, Patrick can spin to increase the throwing distance of the enemy he's holding and after letting go, watch as the enemy flies across the area to your amusement, along with a notable small explosion upon contacting a surface.
- Joke Level: The fourth and final Combat Arena Challenge, which is located very late in the game, has you face off against just one Jellyfish.
Alternative Title(s):The Spongebob Squarepants Movie
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