Frogger was said to be the game that had the most ways to die compared to any other arcade game of its time. 'Frogger – One Does Not Simply Die Once', melds together an imagined past with the actor Sean Bean (who is well known for dying in most roles he's ever taken) having a misspent youth with a Frogger addiction that led to his penchant for choosing character's with an early demise, hence the use of the meme, 'One Does Not Simply... '. Frogger might never have seen the light of day - or have been such a big hit - were it not for one Elizabeth Falconer, who pushed for it to be licenced from Konami. During Falconer's Frogger pitch to executives, a booklet she'd had printed highlighting the good points of Frogger was thrown back at her with the caustic remark, 'It's already been rejected, it's a game for women and kids', to which Falconer retorted with what must be one of the best comebacks in gaming history, 'Aren't you the same executives that turned down Pac-Man?' Needless to say, Falconer got her way, and Frogger went on to be the huge success that it is. 'Frogger – One Does not Simply Die Once' by CMYK shows some of the highly frustrating ways you can die in the original Frogger, and also features the original 4 stage death sequence big, bright and bold for the first time (I've worked the skull a touch) and is limited to only 10 pieces ever to be released. (File delivered as a high quality non-compressed Gif 1024 x 1024 px.)
#12 'Frogger – One Does Not Simply Die Once' by CMYK (Developer: Konami jp, Publisher: Sega/Gremlin us 1981)
- Unit PriceUSD Unit PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- Unit PriceUSD Unit PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
#12 'Frogger – One Does Not Simply Die Once' by CMYK (Developer: Konami jp, Publisher: Sega/Gremlin us 1981)
- Unit PriceUSD Unit PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- Unit PriceUSD Unit PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Frogger was said to be the game that had the most ways to die compared to any other arcade game of its time. 'Frogger – One Does Not Simply Die Once', melds together an imagined past with the actor Sean Bean (who is well known for dying in most roles he's ever taken) having a misspent youth with a Frogger addiction that led to his penchant for choosing character's with an early demise, hence the use of the meme, 'One Does Not Simply... '. Frogger might never have seen the light of day - or have been such a big hit - were it not for one Elizabeth Falconer, who pushed for it to be licenced from Konami. During Falconer's Frogger pitch to executives, a booklet she'd had printed highlighting the good points of Frogger was thrown back at her with the caustic remark, 'It's already been rejected, it's a game for women and kids', to which Falconer retorted with what must be one of the best comebacks in gaming history, 'Aren't you the same executives that turned down Pac-Man?' Needless to say, Falconer got her way, and Frogger went on to be the huge success that it is. 'Frogger – One Does not Simply Die Once' by CMYK shows some of the highly frustrating ways you can die in the original Frogger, and also features the original 4 stage death sequence big, bright and bold for the first time (I've worked the skull a touch) and is limited to only 10 pieces ever to be released. (File delivered as a high quality non-compressed Gif 1024 x 1024 px.)