On the plus side though, you are technically playing a 90s cartoon, which is always nice. Konami did have a way of doing quite a lot with these types of licences. Animaniacs had a similarly loyal feel to it.

Tiny Toon Adventures ran from 1990 to 1992. In addition to producing 98 episodes, there were two specials and a TV movie titled How I Spent My Vacation. The series was a collaboration between noted film director Steven Spielberg's production company Amblin Entertainment, Warner Bros. Animation, and Tom Ruegger. The cartoon was ubiquitously popular and spawned toys, video-games, and other merchandise.


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Meanwhile, Buster and Plucky debate over whether Bugs or Daffy is the best-animated character of all time. The episode offered some humorous back-and-forth interactions with Buster and Plucky, along with some introspection about Babs and her identity as a toon.

The Good

Tiny Toon Adventures is a platformer developed and published in 1991 by Konami for the FC/NES. Konami build it success in the 90's by making actual good games from a lot of American popular IPs from comics and cartoons like TMNT,X-Men, The Simpsons and here the classic Warner Brothers Looney Toons spin-off, Tiny Toons.Features beautiful graphics, rich in colour and details; funny and cute animations, if you leave the characters standing for too long each will show impatience in its own style, which for some reason I always loved to see back in the day.They could have animated just a couple of toons, but they give you variety of characters from this world that are just a joy to see (like the dodo stage screen). The music suits the game well, probably the worst song is the actual Tiny Toons theme but the rest are fine.

You always begin a level controlling Buster Bunny and you can pick from three other toons as a partner; each one has a unique talent: Buster runs very fast, Plucky Duck can swim, flap his wings and glide, Dizzy Devil spin attack breaking blocks and Furball can climbwalls; to switch the character for your partner you must find and grab a "Change" Star Balloon in the level.Carrots and fruits acts as in-game currency and if you collect 30 of them you can trade them for an extra live (provided you can locate Hamton's secret room). There's even a secret bonus Duck Vader boss that rewards you with carrots if you defeat him.

It began production as a result of Warner Bros. reinstating its animation studio in 1989 after a decade of dormancy. During the 1980s, the new studio only worked on revivals of the classic characters, meaning that Tiny Toon Adventures was the first of many original animated series from the studio. The cartoon was the first animated series produced by the collaboration of Steven Spielberg and Warner Bros. Animation during the animation renaissance of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The pilot episode, "The Looney Beginning", aired 14 September 1990 as a prime-time special on CBS, while the series itself was featured in first-run syndication for the first two seasons. The last season was aired on Fox Kids. The series was cancelled and ended production in 1992 in favor of Animaniacs; however, two specials were released in 1994 and aired on Fox. The series has since aired in re-runs on Nickelodeon, Kids' WB!, Cartoon Network, and most recently on The Hub. These have all stopped as of 27 June 2015.

Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of Acme Acres, where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live. The characters attend Acme Looniversity, a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester, Wile E. Coyote, and Elmer Fudd. In the series, the university is founded to teach cartoon characters how to become funny. The school is not featured in every episode, as not all of its storylines are centered around the school.

Like the Looney Tunes, the series is derived from cartoon violence (e.g. anvils falling on someone, liberal use of explosives) and slapstick. The series parodies and references the current events of the early 1990s and Hollywood culture. Occasionally, episodes delve into veiled ethical and morality stories of ecology, self-esteem, and crime.

The series and the show's characters were developed by series producer, head writer and cartoonist Tom Ruegger, division leader Jean MacCurdy, associate producer and artist Alfred Gimeno and story editor/writer Wayne Kaatz. Among the first writers on the series were Jim Reardon, Tom Minton, and Eddie Fitzgerald. The character and scenery designers included Alfred Gimeno, Ken Boyer, Dan Haskett, Karen Haskett, and many other artists and directors.

In order to complete 65 episodes for the first syndicated season, Warner Bros. and Amblin Entertainment contracted several different animation houses. These animation studios included Tokyo Movie Shinsha (now known as TMS Entertainment), Wang Film Productions, AKOM, Freelance Animators New Zealand, Encore Cartoons, StarToons, and Kennedy Cartoons. Tokyo Movie Shinsha also animated the series' opening sequence. Warner Bros. staff disliked working with Kennedy Cartoons due to the studio's inconsistent quality, and episodes that they animated were often subject to multiple re-takes. In other cases, such as the debut episode "The Looney Beginning", portions of Kennedy-animated episodes were re-animated by another studio.

The idea of a series with the basis of younger versions of famous characters was common at the time; the era in which Tiny Toons was produced had such cartoons as Muppet Babies, A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, Tom & Jerry Kids and The Flintstones Kids. Warner Bros. chose to do the same because Spielberg wanted to make a series similar to Looney Tunes, as series producer/show-runner Tom Ruegger explained: "Well, I think in Warner Bros. case, they had the opportunity to work with Steven Spielberg on a project (...) But he didn't want to just work on characters that Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Bob McKimson and Bob Clampett made famous and created. He wanted to be involved with the creation of some new characters." The result was a series similar to Looney Tunes without the use of the same characters.

In December 1988, Tiny Toons was changed from a film to a television series, with Jean MacCurdy overseeing production of the first 65 episodes. MacCurdy said that Tiny Toons was changed to a television series to "reach a broader audience". For the series, MacCurdy hired Tom Ruegger, who previously wrote cartoons for Filmation and Hanna-Barbera, to be a producer. In January 1989, Ruegger and writer Wayne Kaatz began developing the characters and the setting of "Acme Acres" with Spielberg.

A revival of sorts for the Looney Tunes style of comedy, using fun-sized, teenage Toons highly reminiscent of several classic characters. But rather than pure rip-offs, they were actually being taught in school by the originals on being funny and the finer parts of Cartoon Physics and being a Toon. This continues the proud tradition of Warner Bros. animation having a heavy dose of meta-humor, shtick and Lampshade Hanging of many cartoon tropes, but this also incorporated themes of adolescence, Aesops, and '90s sensibilities. It was executive produced by Steven Spielberg, who, along with Warner Bros. executive Terry Semel, thought the Looney Tunes style was due for a makeover on television after the success of Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Tom Ruegger was hired as Showrunner, as he had recently found success launching A Pup Named Scooby-Doo.

The show's pilot episode premiered as a prime-time special on CBS, who had declined to order a full series, on September 14, 1990, before officially beginning its run on weekday afternoon syndication beginning September 17. Many of the stations that ran it were Fox affiliates, leading to Fox officially adding it to the afternoon lineup for its last season (1992-93). After it left the Fox Kids lineup in September 1995, it's since been shown in reruns on Nickelodeon (1995-99, 2002-03), Kids' WB! (1997-2000), Cartoon Network (1999-2001), Nicktoons TV (2002-05), and The Hub (2013-15).

Episodes were either broken into three 7-minute shorts, or made into half-hour full-episode adventures. Similarly, these would be split among stories dealing with misadventures in school, Looney Tunes-like shorts out in Acme Acres, or the occasional music video (the show's renditions of They Might Be Giants' "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" and "Particle Man", for example, are favorites amongst fans of both the show and the band to this day).

A feature-length direct-to-video movie, Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation, shows the misadventures of the kids on various summer road trips. It was eventually split up into four parts and worked into the show's syndicated run.

On October 28, 2020, it was announced that a reboot, called Tiny Toons Looniversity, is being produced for HBO Max and Cartoon Network. Spielberg will return as executive producer, with Erin Gibson (of the podcast Throwing Shade) will serve as co-executive producer and showrunner. On November 1, 2020, Cree Summer revealed Elmyra was not returning. Erin Gibson later confirmed on Twitter that the reboot would consist of 30 minute long episodes as opposed to the original shows Three Shorts format and will be much more character focused, with the cast attending a performing arts school and having to deal with the college life experience. Some promotional art for the new show confirmed that much of the core cast would be returning; which, despite what Cree has said, seemingly also include Elmyra. The series premiered in the fall of 2023.

Both music videos are included on TMBG's 1999 video compilation, Direct From Brooklyn. John and John also recorded audio commentaries for both videos, during which they discuss how they were contacted by Warner Brothers for the project, and how the videos were the 'easiest' they'd ever made, as they had relatively nothing to do with them. They comment on the violence of the wrestling-themed "Particle Man" video and the portrayal of the saxophone solo as being done with an accordion. John Flansburgh also expresses his disapproval of being portrayed as Hamton (a pig) in the Istanbul video, though they realize he may be portraying Mark Feldman, who played violin on the track. While TMBG seem not to think much of the cartoons themselves, they do credit the exposure they gained from Tiny Toons as an important step in their career. ff782bc1db

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