


It is instead an homage to Nintendo’s Donkey Kong. In reality, however, that game never actually existed. In the film, Fix-It Felix, Jr., is an arcade machine that debuted in 1982 from publisher TobiKomi. “Wreck-It Ralph” has three fictional video game worlds, all of them derived from recognizable types: “Fix-It Felix,” a 1980s-style “platformer” similar to “Donkey Kong” in which players jump to avoid obstacles “Hero’s Duty,” a first-person shooter akin to “Call of Duty” and “Halo” and “Sugar Rush,” a cartoony racing. This allowed for greater control of the story as Disney wasn’t limited by a pre-existing game universe.

The development team drew inspiration from many existing game concepts and combined them for a brand new experience. The game « Sugar Rush » does not exist in the real world. TurboTime is considered a classic game, similar to Donkey Kong or Fix-It Felix, Jr. Strangely, TurboTime can still be seen inside the arcade in the story adaption, despite that it was unplugged for years. RoadBlasters was a real arcade racing game released by Atari in 1987. Turbo (ターボ Tābo) is a racing game released in 1981 by Sega. It plays similarly to light-gun arcade games, such as Time Crisis and House of the Dead, in which the player must shoot enemies while the character automatically progresses through the level. Hero’s Duty is a flash-based browser game based on the game of the same name from the movie, Wreck-It Ralph.
