Friday Night Funkin Switch Cost



How much does it cost to buy? The official unofficial subreddit for Friday Night Funkin' a rhythm game. Currently Funkin' Created Oct 9, 2020. Nintendo Switch Jumps into the air, bringing its user along, this is spammable Actions host attached Screenshot 10.22.37.png to 「3ds Nintendo Switch」. FRIDAY NIGHT FUNKIN' 'PRETTY DOPE ASS GAME' PLAYSTATION MAGAZINE MAY 2003 ISSUE. ALSO PLAY ON NEWGROUNDS.COM! Funkin-linux-64bit.zip 144 MB.

Friday Night Funkin Switch Cost

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Website/Newgrounds

Go To

'Woot! All my 5 R belong to this!'
SwitchFriday Night Funkin Switch Cost
'Everything, by everyone.'
Advertisement:

Newgrounds is a very popular Web Animation and Web Games site, where you'll find far over 240,000 Adobe Flash animations and games submitted, watched and played by over 6,000,000 users. It's quite big, in other words. The site's owner, Tom Fulp, started the site to showcase his flash in the late '90s, but soon other artists began to ask him if they could appear in the site too.

This eventually led to the creation of the Internet's first automated portal, where users submit their flash to the site and users of the site then vote to see if the animation should continue on the site ('saved') or should be deleted ('blammed'). The site has grown considerably since then. For a more detailed history of the site, see their page here.

Like YouTube and other user generated sites, you'll find flashes that are close to True Art (check out some of the stuff below!) and flashes that are as bad as you might expect from such a large collection of animation. Indeed, some groups like to submit bad flashes just to laugh at the reviews (the worst ones generally don't last long before getting blammed). And the site has great deal of very, VERY NSFW content (when they say adult content, they mean it!). You've been warned.

Advertisement:

Newgrounds also features audio portal where people can listen and download user-made songs for free and use it in their works. They also have an art portal where the content differs greatly from the art found in DeviantArt.

If you wish to get an even better idea about with all this is about, check out this video by kaptainkristian about the site's history and role in the evolution of animation and Internet media. Newgrounds user thewax70 captures the spirit of the site and its motto quite effectively in this Flash animation, which features more than 40 of Newgrounds' original animations and games. There's also this interactive collab released for the site's 20th anniversary featuring several of the site's iconic creators and characters. In reverence to all of the above, the Tankman is set to appear as an assist in the IndieMascot FighterFraymakers.

Advertisement:

In preparation of AdobeFlash's end-of-life in The New '20s, Newgrounds is designing its own Flash player to preserve 20+ year archive of content.

Some of the more famous animations, viral videos, and video games that originated from (or, at least, were made famous by) Newgrounds are:

  • Animutations, such as Hyakugojyuuichi
    • Colin Mochrie vs. Jesus H. Christ fanimutrilogy
  • Awesome Series by Egoraptor
  • Barney Bunch
  • The CCC series.
  • The Colour My Series
  • Several flash games by Edmund McMillen
  • Epic Battle Fantasy and its four sequels
  • Larry
  • Pico
  • The flash video for 'Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny'
  • Xiao Xiao (originally from Chinese internet, made famous on Newgrounds)

And so forth.

The site itself features examples of:

  • Achievement System: In 2008, an achievement system was added that allowed users to add medals to their games and movies.
  • Animated Shock Comedy: With the dawn of Web 2.0, along with the release of the taboo-breakingtrope codifier, the site's creators were encouraged to push the boundaries of both humor and technology. This trope would be phased out over time, as both technology and adult animation refined themselves throughout the new millennium.
  • Ascended Fanboy: Several artists, musicians, animators, and various other notable artists have gone on to workformajorstudios, tour around the world, or start their own indie media labels.
  • Butt-Monkey: The site's founder, Tom Fulp, is often on the receiving end of this, as people make him a target of their jokes or give him a silly cameo in their work, albeit mostly in an affectionate manner.
  • Feelies: The Newgrounds store can be seen as this. It was finally closed down in 2013 due to it taking up too much space and starting to cost too much to keep a physical store in their building. While the store itself is closed, the staff still give away or sell stuff that did not manage to get sold at events or during contents on occasion.
  • Gotta Catch Them All: The secrets. With the redesign all but one are gone, but the crew is planning on creating new ones.
  • Gorn: The 'Ultra Violence' category is made up of ultra violent flashes.
  • Mascot: Pico, Tankman, and P-Bot.
  • Medal of Dishonor: The 'Turd of the Week' award was supposed to be this, as it was given to the lowest-scoring flash without being blammed. However, it encouraged many creators, particularly ones from The Clock Crew and other troll groups, to spam the portal with crappy flashes. While still present, it's no longer noted in the Classic Portal to discourage people from actively trying to go for this reward.
  • Network Decay: In a more positive example of this trope, the site gradually shifted away from its Vulgar Humor roots in favor of a more diverse portfolio of flash movies and games. This is reflected in the contrast between the old and new taglines. Raunchy works are still produced for the site, but they're no longer exclusively the focus of the site or its community.
  • Not the Intended Use: After Geometry Dash update 1.9, many Geometry Dash players began to steal and upload content to the Audio Portal to use in Geometry Dash.
    • On February 1st, 2017, Both TomFulp and Robtop announced fixes on both ends to resolve this issue ending conflict between both communities.
  • Sliding Scale of Silliness vs. Seriousness: Most content lies on the silly end of the scale, but the website does have a 'Drama' section for more serious works.
  • Stick Figure Animation: A highly prevalent animation style seen on the site, seen across the spectrum of skill level and quality.
  • Sturgeon's Law: Defied with the site's 'blam' system, which allows users to vote flashes off the site. However, because Newgrounds has so many flashes to begin with, it's inevitable that crappy flashes will still slip through the cracks.
  • Tank Goodness: The site's Iconic Logo that has been used for years is the Tankman.
  • Toilet-Drinking Dog Gag: There is a Flash animation called Water out of the Toilet. It is a faux ad where two dogs discuss the merits of drinking toilet water vs faucet water. The explanation for toilet water being better tasting for dogs is that well, humans do their business in the toilet.

But How do WE Get In?

Arriving at the Black Arms' base, Shadow is told how the defenses are wired into the guards stationed outside. But how can the Black Arms-aligned get inside in the first place?

Example of:
Didn't Think This Through

Index

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/FridayNightFunkinCorruption

Go To

Friday Night Funkin': Corruptionnote is a web series/Game Mod created by Phantom Fear with the aid of musical talent from SimplyCrispy and fluffyhairs. Told primarily as a series of sprite-swaps for the original game, it is notable for being the first Dark Fic to make rounds in the game's community.

Set in an alternate ending to Week 5, rather than personally deal with the Boyfriend and Girlfriend, the Lemon Monster decides to aim higher by unleashing the titular corruption on the world. Taking the form of a black-and-pink tar-like substance that envelops the target before giving them claws and a Nightmare Face, the Boyfriend and Girlfriend are first to be turned into monsters with the sole purpose of spreading the corruption even further.

Advertisement:

Friday Night Funkin Nintendo Switch

With the Lemon Monster's primordial evil rapidly spreading, the other characters are now forced to fight for their lives in a very real struggle against the once-pure duo - and while it may be possible to save them with The Power of Rock, it slowly becomes horribly apparent that the cost may be immense.

The playlist for the entire series can be found here. The mod is still being worked on, but a demo of Week 2 is currently available through this video.

Advertisement:

Tropes:

  • Adaptational Context Change: The cutscene of Spirit breaking out of Senpai from the original game remains, but is moved from the start of the third song to the beginning of the fourth: in the original context, Spirit was breaking free from his bonds to challenge Boyfriend for his body, killing Senpai in the process; as the two are the same character within the mod, it is instead Senpai unleashing his true form in a last-ditch effort to kill Boyfriend.
  • Adaptational Heroism:
    • Pico, the bounty hunter who was hired to kill Boyfriend in the original game, got corrupted trying to save him from his corruption.
    • The Mom, an Ax-Crazy lady who tried to kill the Boyfriend, is pulling all the stops to try save Pico during their Week.
    • The Senpai's hardcoded desire to win is depicted as a savior complex instead of a Bitch in Sheep's Clothing persona; after realizing something's wrong, he holds the line thinking he can protect the Girlfriend from the Boyfriend, but becomes visibly forlorn once he realizes they're fighting together. Even after losing to Boyfriend a second time, he simply demands they exit the game and leave him alone, only fighting back once Boyfriend attempts to delete him.
  • Adaptational Villainy:
      Advertisement:
    • The Lemon Demon originally was just a Soft-Spoken Sadist who had a fascination with eating the Boyfriend and the Girlfriend. Here, he lets loose a virus with the potential to take everyone's free will.
    • Due to being the first ones corrupted, Boyfriend and Girlfriend fight to spread the corruption rather than prevent it.
  • Adult Fear: Skid and Pump are elementary-school-aged kids. Their conversion at the Boyfriend's hands is depicted as the most agonizing and part of the perils of Free-Range Children.
  • Alien Blood: If the bleeding wounds in Skid and Pico's sprites are any indication, Corruption shells bleed out pink blood.
  • Anachronic Order: From the core game's perspective, the game's chronology goes from Week 5 to Week 3, then to Week 2, then to Week 4 and Week 6 simultaneously, then finally to Week 1.
  • The Apocalypse Brings Out the Best in People: All of the game's rivals set aside their previous agendas to fight back the encroaching corruption.
  • Art Evolution: The story initially starts out as a basic sprite-swap that completely fills in the Boyfriend and Girlfriend's sprites with solid black and simply adds in the face of the human head from 'Winter Horrorland'; as the series progresses, the other corrupted characters are given extra details to make them stand out from each other.
  • Ambiguous Situation:
    • It's left intentionally unclear how much of a victim's original self is sealed away while fully corrupted, likely as part of the indication that the corruption isn't incurable.
    • Due to the Weeks still being against the same characters barring Week 4, it's unclear how far the corruption has actually spread outside of the main cast or if Boyfriend and Girlfriend were the only initial victims.
    • The lack of cutscenes leaves it ambiguous if the opponents of the Week sought out Boyfriend in hopes to cure him, or if Boyfriend hunted them down to corrupt them. The exception is Week 6, as the description of the first 'Evil Boyfriend vs Senpai' video states Boyfriend forcefully inserted himself into the game so he could corrupt it.
  • Better to Die than Be Killed: It is heavily implied Pico shot himself so the corruption couldn't use his body. Unfortunately for him, he lived.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Senpai presents himself as a Nice Guy and Chick Magnet, but when presented with a pair that threaten both himself and the game he's in, he drops all pretense and hits Boyfriend with everything he has, which is quite a lot.
  • Beware the Silly Ones: The Lemon Demon, while still a Laughably Evil lemon headed... thing with a fascination with eating people, still managed to spread the titular corruption to most of the main characters of the original game via Boyfriend and Girlfriend.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: Zig-zagged. The corruption may have genuine mind-affecting properties as initially hinted at, however Skid and Pico's body language while they're almost corrupted completely suggests that it may also be using its Grey Goo properties to physically drag them around while silencing their original selves.
  • Broken Record: After being fully corrupted, Pico is only able to vocalize using his songs from the original game, even if he's fighting another character in a new song.
  • Cessation of Existence: Once Week 6's final song ends, Boyfriend gains admin control and deletes Spirit and Senpai successfully, making them the only characters to be Killed Off for Real instead of being corrupted like the others.
  • Chained by Fashion: In Week 4, Pico has a cross of chains bound to his chest. Whether he put them there himself or if they were the result of a failed attempt at capturing him is unknown.
  • Composite Character: Within canon, Senpai is simply the AI protagonist in the game Spirit inhabits. In Corruption, they are the same entity.
  • The Corruption: The titular corruption Monster unleashes is a tar-like substance that spreads across its victims, encasing them and taking control of their bodies. The fingers grow pink claws while the faces are replaced with wide-eye stares and Cheshire Cat Grins, also in pink.
  • Dark Fic: Although Week 5 of the original game demonstrates a Vile Villain, Saccharine Show and Week 6 completely re-contextualizes the ongoing narrative in a much darker light, Corruption actively brings the undertones of both weeks into the forefront and throws the game's characters into a battle with genuine stakes and devastating consequences.
  • Dark Reprise:
    • 'Sanguine South' is the first true remix to appear in the story, being a version of 'South' that illustrates Skid and Pump's hopeless fight against the corruption.
    • The original 'Senpai' is an upbeat track to lull the player into believing Week 6 was going to be a simple, fun romp; in contrast, the remix used for the mod is slower paced and contains heavy audio glitching, mostly from Boyfriend, playing into the horror aspects and how deranged Boyfriend has become.
    • The third song of Week 6, 'Treacherous Thorns', is an even darker spin on an already foreboding track, showing that Senpai is done playing games and wants Boyfriend gone.
  • Double-Meaning Title: The mod's version of 'South' is titled 'Sanguine South' — 'Sanguine' can refer to remaining optimistic in dire situations, referencing Skid and Pump's usual attitude, but it can also mean blood thirsty, referencing the corrupted characters.
  • Early Installment Weirdness: Week 5 is where the story first began as a simple sprite-swap without any real meaning, and thus lacks much of the details that appear in later weeks. It is, however, important for contextualizing the corruption's origin.
  • Empty Shell: Victims of the corruption have no genuine emotions or drive, only a simple-minded desire to spread it further.
  • Evil Sounds Deep: The corrupted Boyfriend speaks using a tone and voice effect that more closely resembles Pico's, sounding deeper and like it's been processed through a radio. This is most noticeable in less hectic songs like 'Senpai (Glitch Remix)', where the Boyfriend is obviously off-pitch while Senpai is relatively the same.
  • Exotic Eye Designs:
    • While corrupted, Skid's eyes become bright pink Xs.
    • After getting corrupted completely, spirals swirl out of Pico's pupils to the edges of his eyes.
  • Eye Scream: After Boyfriend tries and fails to delete him, Senpai's eyes disappear from his face, as if they'd been gouged out.
  • Forced to Watch: The eyes are always the last part of a victim's original self to go once the corruption overruns them, forcing them to watch as the rest of their body is transformed into an evil facsimile.
  • Foreshadowing:
    • The last song of Week 3 is a mashup of 'M.I.L.F.' and 'Blammed', initially odd considering 'MILF' is one of the Mom's songs and that it is the only mashup in the mod's OST... until you get to Week 4, which has the fully corrupted Pico face off against the Mom.
    • When Boyfriend initially tries to gain admin privileges in Week 6, the current admin is listed as a series of question marks. When Boyfriend attempts to delete Senpai during 'Treacherous Thorns', his request is rejected, with the error textbox revealing the current admin is Senpai.
  • The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You: The Boyfriend extends a claw towards the camera whenever he misses or otherwise gestures in his idle animations. Though it's obvious he's reaching for the player, it's not made clear why as part of the ongoing Ambiguous Situation regarding the self-control of victims.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom:
    • In Week 4's third song, Pico's eyes have a white glow to them, and the now corrupted backup dancers are all black with shining white eyes.
    • During Week 6, the corruption showing through Boyfriend is all black, save for his shining white eyes and grin.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: While the Boyfriend is the main threat to the rest of the characters, Monster is the one who initially released the virus and corrupted Boyfriend and Girlfriend in the first place. He can also be seen watching through the window when lightning flashes during Week 2.
  • Hope Spot:
    • The second song of Week 3 sees Boyfriend breaking through his corruption and singing alongside Pico in an effort to free themselves completely. In the final song of Week 3, Boyfriend has not only been reconsumed, but Pico's own corruption has worsened, and he loses himself completely after the song finishes.
    • The second song of Week 4 shows that while The Mom has now been corrupted by Pico, Pico himself has managed to peek through his corruption enough to show an uncorrupted eye, hinting that he's still Fighting from the Inside, only for him to revert back to being fully corrupted on the final song as The Mom is taken over herself.
      'He's still in there, somewhere...'
  • I Cannot Self-Terminate: Skid has a bloodied handprint on his right temple in 'Chiller', while the corrupted Pico has blood splatters on his face and points his gun towards his head instead of the ground in his animation for hitting a right-facing note; both suggest that they tried to self-mutilate or take their own lives to stop their bodies from being used, but somehow failed.
  • Interface Spoiler: The portion of the videos showcasing the stages always end in asking the viewer to subscribe for the next video, with the second video of each Week using 'final battle': if the second video instead uses 'next battle', it's a sign there's something else going on.
    • In the second 'Pico vs Mom' video, this was because the following video was a momentary perspective shift depicting Boyfriend's first match against Senpai, with the final 'Pico vs Mom' video being released the week after.
    • In the second 'Boyfriend vs Senpai' video, this is because Senpai has four songs, not three - the third video is instead the one to use 'final battle'.
  • In the Style of...: 'Dead Pixel' is 'Roses' in the style of the soundtrack for the NEO mod, being made by the same composer.
  • Killed Off for Real: While the corruption is ridiculously hard to get rid of, it isn't incurable, meaning the characters affected could theoretically be freed from it. Senpai however is deleted, with the game in shambles and his code unrecoverable, making him the only character in the mod to outright die.
  • Mood Whiplash: Week 6 begins with the usual dialogue for the Boyfriend and Senpai, until Boyfriend says a code command that clips out of the text box.
    Senpai: Ah, a new fair maiden has come in search for true love!
    Senpai: A serenade between gentlemen shall decide where her beautiful heart shall reside.
    Boyfriend: void StartTransferal(Soulbf_soul){ switch (admin) { case'user': admin '???'} GrantOwnership(admin) Console.Write('You are next.')
  • Nerves of Steel: Pico and the Mom approach the corruption head-on and calmly persevere even as it latches onto them. It's implied that this actually slows down the conversion process.
  • No-Sell: After Senpai tells them to leave, Boyfriend attempts to delete him entirely, only to find that Senpai has administrator privileges - he denies the request and is incredibly pissed off at the attempt.
  • Off-Model: Boyfriend was corrupted while wearing his red parka, which is reflected in his sprite; however, when he briefly breaks through his corruption during Week 3, the parts of his chest not covered in gunk show him wearing his white t-shirt instead.
  • Ominous Obsidian Ooze: The corruption is a dark purple substance that spreads across its victims; upon encasing them completely, it takes them over and uses their bodies to further spread itself. Those consumed are given a Healing Factor and are capable of supernatural feats their normal selves would never be able to do.
  • Ominous Visual Glitch: Due to taking place within the Hating Simulator videogame, Week 6 features heavy use of visual and audio glitching; for the first song, it's to contrast the normal bright nature of the dating sim with the corruption, with everything going screwy as Boyfriend messes with the game. The corruption itself is presented as black pixels glitching over and covering the character sprites.
  • Painting the Medium: Original songs featuring fully or nearly corrupted characters will have their vocals muffled, referencing how the corruption covers their mouth and quite literally silences them.
  • Power Floats: In the final song of Week 6, Boyfriend has entered the game completely and is hovering off the ground to signify his own power and the otherworldly nature of the corruption.
  • The Power of Rock: Winning a music battle against a corrupted character uncorrupts them, at least partially; in contrast, losing a battle against a corrupted character will cause the loser to corrupt or speed up their conversion if they already are corrupting.
  • Recycled Soundtrack: Week 3 and the first song of Week 2 consist of fan Friday Night Funkin' remixes that were created separately from and are completely unrelated to the mod, repurposed to fit the context. Following the first song of Week 2, Phantom Fear brought on musicians to create new music specifically for the mod, starting with 'Sanguine South'.
  • Scary Teeth: The mouths of corrupted characters resemble Monster's: numerous rectangular teeth put in the general pattern of a constant grin. The exceptions to this are Pump and Skid, who instead have rows of white, shark-like teeth and a Jagged Mouth, respectively.
  • Summon Backup Dancers: Played for Drama; due to the much more serious tone, the Mom's backup dancers normally present during Week 4 are absent for the first two songs. They suddenly appear during the final song, corrupted and motionless save for the occasional twitch. Unlike other corrupted characters, their eyes are a bright, glowing white; as Pico's eyes are also glowing when they weren't before, it's implied he somehow called them over, as if to mock the Mom.
  • Super-Persistent Predator: Corrupted characters will do anything they can in order to spread the corruption onto others. In particular, the description for the 'Evil Boyfriend vs Senpai' video confirms that the Boyfriend forced himself and the Girlfriend into Senpai's Dating Sim simply so they could corrupt it.
  • Surprise Creepy: Week 6 initially begins like canon, complete with an apparently uncorrupted Boyfriend and Girlfriend. Then Boyfriend's text box is replaced with code commands of him trying to take admin control, and the song, Boyfriend, Girlfriend, and even the background girls begin heavily glitching out.
  • Taking You with Me: When Senpai realises his game will be destroyed regardless of Boyfriend's input, he tries to drag Boyfriend down with him, and fails.
  • Two Lines, No Waiting: The first video of Week 6 was uploaded before the final video of Week 4; within the context of the narrative, Pico is fighting his final bout against the Mom whilst Boyfriend is infiltrating the Hating Simulator videogame to have a match against the Senpai.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: The Girlfriend's parents fighting Boyfriend during Week 5 sets the stage for Monster's takeover and the events of the mod, as not only does it give him the opportunity to nab Boyfriend and Girlfriend and corrupt them, but also gives him a mall full of unsuspecting people as a perfect ground zero to release the virus.
  • What If?: The entire story asks what if the severed head in 'Winter Horrorland' wasn't just for show, and answers that hypothetical scenario with a full-blown apocalypse.
  • Wingding Eyes: Averted. Unlike in the original game, the character icons on the health bar keep the character's eyes as they are and simply show the corruption spreading when the icon nears the edge. The exception is the first fight against the Mom, whose lose icon still depicts her snarling with X's for eyes.
  • Vampire Refugee: Week 3 sees a half-corrupted Pico fighting against the fully-corrupted Boyfriend. While he puts up a good fight, Pico succumbs shortly after losing his third song.
  • Villain Protagonist: The brainwashed Boyfriend is the main villain of the narrative, and all of the songs except Week 4 are shown from his perspective.

Boyfriend Glitches Out

Week 6 of the Corruption mod takes full advantage of the in-universe videogame setting, featuring a heavy use of glitching to hammer in how 'other' Boyfriend and Girlfriend have become and how they do not at all belong.

Example of:
Ominous Visual Glitch

Alternative Title(s):Friday Night Funkin Evil

Index