Total Distortion holds the highest honor of featuring one of the most entertaining Game Over screens of all time, but it’s so much more than that. It’s a psycho-billy freak-out.
I’ve never seen a game so accurately channel the strangeness of the ’90s, rock-and-roll, and other assorted oddities of FMV gaming, but creator Joe Sparks of Spaceship Warlock fame absolutely nailed it here.
You’re tasked with entering the Total Distortion Dimension and beating the pants off of Guitar Warriors as you figure out how to jump-start pop culture as you know it on Earth. In layman’s terms, you have to shoot a bunch of music videos to bring back home. You’ll also own face at guitar battles, amass fame and fortune, and complete mini-games as your character sleeps so you don’t have nightmares.
As far as innovation goes, Total Distortion is one of the only games I’ve ever seen to so completely break the mold in nearly every way, from its voice acting and soundtrack to the surrealistic visuals.
I get giddy just thinking about how it could have turned out if somehow Quest for Fame’s V-Pick peripheral could have been implemented somehow. It could have been music nirvana. But I’ll settle for the Distortion Dimension. C’mon, baby.