Alligator and Alligata
The said album is also a 1980 film as a very convincing beast enjoys devouring several humans before going boom.
The 13th Floor and The Thirteenth Floor
Vampire Knight and Vampire Night
Death Watch and Deathwatch
God Hand and Godhand
School Daze and Skool Daze
Tokyo and Tokio
F.E.A.R. and Fear
Kronos, Cronos and Chronos
Zombie and Zombi
Compare the above to poster artwork for a striking resemblance.
Dead Rising covered its undead back by using this disclaimer.
"This game was not developed, approved or licensed by the owners or creators of George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead."
The famous tagline is made by Ken Foree, (repeated in the 2004 remake) and refers to something his voodoo priest grandaddy in Trinidad used to tell him.
I've just had a thought. Was Tom Savini's biker char Sex Machine in cult vampire horror From Dusk Till Dawn a purposeful tribute by Robert Rodriguez?
It's certainly a possibility.
Creatures and C.R.E.A.T.U.R.E.S
Underworld and Underwurlde
Stryker and Striker
Gopher and Gofer
Ken-Go and Kengo series
Tommy Gunn and Tommy Gun
This Charming Man chose a sensible weapon to handle.
Kabal and Cabal
Hell-Hound and Hellhound
Tom and Jerry and Tom & Gerri
Cashier No. 9 is also a band. Yeah, I can't help myself. Ha ha.
Sub-Zero and Subzero
Brake and Break
Fevre Dream and Fever Dream
Knowing I'd eventually use it, I took a snap of this very, very odd coincidence in The Last of Us.
Madder than a hatter, right?
Jack Krauser and Wolfgang Krauzer
Vasquez and Vazquez
Looper and Luper
Cable and Kable
Edi.E and Eddy
'Ere lads, on the ed will yer'? Thanks.
Sheeva and Sheva
K, K' and Kei
Okay Manuel, did you get all that?
Of course not. He's from Barcelona.
Ma-ma and Mama
Your patience is appreciated while the final part is prepared...
The said album is also a 1980 film as a very convincing beast enjoys devouring several humans before going boom.
8 bit developer and publisher. |
Vampire Knight and Vampire Night
Originally released for arcades in 2000. |
God Hand and Godhand
Square indulged with Final Fantasy VII fighting spin-off - Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring. It was ported to PS1 in 1999. |
The 1984 sequel to this absolute classic was Back to Skool. |
The Tokyo Skytree in Japan's capital. |
A char from Sega's 1995 arcade Fighting Vipers. |
A decent enough thriller but probably consigned to Mark Wahlberg obscurity. |
A solid 1987 shmup with Tim Follin at the musical helm. |
Cronos in God of War III. |
This famous survival horror of sorts was first released in 1986 and its futuristic remake (ZombiU) were inspired by a certain horror set in a shopping mall... |
Dead Rising covered its undead back by using this disclaimer.
"This game was not developed, approved or licensed by the owners or creators of George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead."
The famous tagline is made by Ken Foree, (repeated in the 2004 remake) and refers to something his voodoo priest grandaddy in Trinidad used to tell him.
I've just had a thought. Was Tom Savini's biker char Sex Machine in cult vampire horror From Dusk Till Dawn a purposeful tribute by Robert Rodriguez?
It's certainly a possibility.
Creatures and C.R.E.A.T.U.R.E.S
In 1996, 'artificial life' was born. |
In comparison, it's a shame Torture Trouble sort of sucked ass. |
The stunning Kate Beckinsale as Selene in the marmite tasting franchise. |
Flip-screen shenanigans from 1984. |
Made his debut in Mortal Kombat 3. |
SNK took a gamble by introducing the 'striker' system in The King of Fighters '99. |
Danny Huston as Colonel William Stryker in X-Men Origins: Wolverine. |
Gofer was merely a small portion of Bacterion in Gradius II. |
Although unconfirmed, I'd confidently suggest that this 1991 effort from Irem serves as a pseudo sequel to Ninja Spirit. |
The late Tommy Morrison appeared in Rocky V. |
This Charming Man chose a sensible weapon to handle.
Kabal and Cabal
Another debutant from Mortal Kombat 3. |
Adapted for the screen as Nightbreed in 1990, the imagination of Midian deserved more recognition. |
There was a spate of Mortal Kombat wannabes and Bloodstorm favoured sprite over digitised violence. |
The third episode from Inside No. 9 explored mental illness. |
Fevre Dream and Fever Dream
Knowing I'd eventually use it, I took a snap of this very, very odd coincidence in The Last of Us.
Madder than a hatter, right?
Jack Krauser and Wolfgang Krauzer
Villains usually assume a monstrous transformation in Umbrella land and Leon's nemesis Krauser is no exception to the rule in Resident Evil 4. |
Krauzer made his first appearance as the final challenge in Fatal Fury 2. Appreciate the proverbial tank in the superb Real Bout Fatal Fury Special. |
A minor char from Assassin's Creed III: Liberation. |
A flying mushroom thing from Sega's Space Harrier. |
Gerard Butler portrayed the ultimate warrior in the unsuccessful pick up and play film Gamer. |
As the name fitted... |
Captain Commando also featured boss Dolg who could easily be a relative of Abigail from Street Fighter '89, sorry Final Fight. |
Eddie Dombrowski (Silent Hill 2) |
Eddy Gordo (Tekken series) |
Another debut from Mortal Kombat 3. |
Chris's irritating sidekick in the extremely disappointing Resident Evil 5. |
Who's the dude behind the shades in The King of Fighters '99? Oh yeah, Kyo is still pissed off at been deselected in three-on-three mayhem. |
She was unimpressed at the sight of Kaneda dropping his pants. |
"Que?" |
Ma-ma and Mama
Madeline 'Ma-ma' Madrigal (Lena Heady) in Dredd. |
HEY ASSHOLE, I SAID NO PICTURES. Despite its supernatural angle, Mama tells the tragic tale of a mother's desperation. |
Mama was a boss in Silent Hill: The Arcade. |
Boss bitch Scarlet in Silent Hill: Homecoming rings a slight bell with the above. |
Presenting the Mannequin Monster, as seen in Silent Hill: Revelation. |