![]() The objective of the game is as simple as all of Beavis and Butthead’s goals: befriend Todd, a tough guy dropout who wins their respect by kicking their asses on a regular basis. Virtual Stupidity even frames itself like an episode of the show: it starts with the “Don’t try this at home” disclaimer and the title card with portraits of the duo cackling in their signature laughs. The result is a game that feels like a natural extension of its source material.īeavis and Butthead, of course, was an immediately popular MTV show in the mid-90s about two addle-brained, music-addicted high schoolers with little ambition beyond acting like complete morons. When compared to the pile of cheap, quickly forgotten Beavis and Butthead games for consoles, it ditches their stale platforming and necessarily watered down content for point-and-click-style gameplay that’s much more fitting. Released at the height of the duo’s popularity, Beavis and Butthead in Virtual Stupidity is the opposite of a typical licensed product, a rare game that nails the essence of its source material.
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