Looney Tunes: Carrot Crazy

Looney Tunes: Carrot Crazy

released on Feb 01, 1999
by VD-Dev

Looney Tunes: Carrot Crazy

released on Feb 01, 1999
by VD-Dev

Coming home after a long day at work, Bugs and Lola find their garden ransacked and all of their carrots stolen. Now the two must explore the Warner Bros. Lot to discover the identity of the carrot thief. You guide the bunnies through five worlds, collecting carrots that will allow the characters use special powers like the ability to walk on thin air and using their ears as a helicopter propeller. The two can also collect Super Carrots that will allow them to use their powers longer and Habanero Carrots that make them invincible. The player must switch between the Bugs and Lola to solve puzzles with each character's special skills. Try to find the carrot thief in Looney Tunes: Carrot Crazy.


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Eu poderia ter dado uma nota menor para este jogo pelo fato de não haver continues.

A really fun platformer that has aged well. I really enjoy the boss stages and all the levels are fun to explore. This game looks so good too the sprites really pop.

This is a game that has absolutely no right to look, sound, and play as well as it does. It’s a genuine hidden gem on the GBC. The pixel art is impressive, the music is incredible (has a bit of a demo scene vibe, almost), and it plays great too. The only major flaws are some enemies that come out of nowhere and some collectibles that are cryptic to reach. (I swear there’s one in the last stage that you can’t collect at first, then later you get a slightly higher jump for no reason and can come back to get it. Very odd.) There’s also some serious attention to detail here - most enemies can blow themselves up with their own munitions, and it’s funny every time they do. If you like GBC games or Looney Tunes it’s well worth a play.

I am not exaggerating when I say that this game has one of the best soundtracks in the entire Game Boy library. Some of the tracks like the ones for Marvin's Space Station and Taz's Zoo have a real "indie game song composer going way too hard on a game meant to be 8-bit" feel to them only they're songs on the actual hardware written for a licensed Looney Tunes game from 1998. This game even has an 8-bit rendition of Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 and it kicks ass!

As for the actual game, it's alright. It's a decent little platformer and you can do far worse on this system. What's notable is that this game has a funny little quirk with the gameplay where Lola, with her ability to slowly descend in a game that does kill you if you fall from too far of a height, ends up being the way more useful character to use while Bugs Bunny - the most well-known Warner Bros character - just becomes that character you only switch back to in order to do situational puzzles. Bit of an odd choice to have Bugs Bunny be the "only use to push a block" guy but hey, it's certainly unique.