A playthrough of LJN’s 1989 license based action-platformer for the NES, Friday the 13th.

Friday the 13th isn’t a day that often falls in October, so I thought I’d celebrate with a look back at one of NES library’s most notorious games.

Appearing on shelves a few months before the theatrical release of Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan, this Atlus-developed NES adaptation of the franchise was clearly meant to capitalize on the hype surrounding cinema’s most celebrated serial killer of the 1980s.

This rendition of Friday the 13th takes most of its cues from the second film in the series. Jason Vorhees is determined to avenge the death of his mother, and he has the hapless campers and counselors at Camp Crystal Lake firmly in his sights.

You take control of six controllable counselors, each with his/her own strengths and weaknesses, and over the course of three days, it’s your job to protect the fifteen kids staying at the camp while arming yourself for the inevitable showdown with Jason himself.

Jason regularly patrols the camp, and when he comes across an occupied cabin, the alarm sounds. That’s your cue to rush in and fight him off before he can make mincemeat of his target. If all of the counselors or all of the campers die, it’s game over.

Between attacks, you’ll be running around scouring the camp for hints and weapons. You kill zombies as you follow the paths that wind around the camp as well as explore the interior areas from an over-the-shoulder 3D perspective, and you’d best stay on your toes. Jason can ambush you anywhere, any time.

A big hint: if you really want to gain the upper hand, find the altar where Jason keeps his mother’s severed head and steal the sweater! It will halve the damage taken by the counselor wearing it.

Friday the 13th has been savaged by both critics and the gaming public in the years since its release, and while game has its share of faults – the gameplay loop is repetitive, the mechanics are difficult to figure out without the manual, the controls are loose, and the outdoor music’s endless four-second music loop is grating – it’s not a total write-off. The creative ways in which it draws inspiration from the film’s setting and the non-linear structure of the gameplay suit the theme well and help to build tension, and the number of secrets to be uncovered gives it a fair amount of replayability.

As a kid, I couldn’t figure it out and usually wound up bored and frustrated after a few minutes, but as an adult armed with patience and an instruction manual, I have fun with it. It’s not great, but it is interesting to see such a novel approach to adapting a horror movie, and to see how it takes tentative steps toward establishing concepts that would later become defining elements of the survival horror genre.

Happy Friday the 13th!
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No cheats were used during the recording of this video.

NintendoComplete (http://www.nintendocomplete.com/) punches you in the face with in-depth reviews, screenshot archives, and music from classic 8-bit NES games!

33 Comments

  1. I'm 45 years old and I remember this game very well. To this day, the gosh darn music is so atmospheric, even with a little bit of sound they could muster on the Nintendo. Cabin tunes were also great.

  2. Never beat the game, but it would spook me, especially Jason's mom head floating around.

  3. I remember my grandfather got me this game for Christmas in the late 80's. Love this game but it was soo damn hard too kill Jason.

  4. Whenever Jason showed up you were screwed😅😢 My neighbor had this one back in the late 80s I would go over there and play

  5. When I first played it I admit scared me The music Jason coming out Of places still one of the best games ever even my niece loves it

  6. Сюжета в игре конечно не присутствует, но она запомнилась с детства саундтрек и атмосфера. Далёкий 1997 год

  7. Can you imagine modern kids nowadays trying to play this? Not only do they have no idea what Friday the 13th as a series is, but they wouldn't know where to go in this game at all. Amazing what a totally different era the 1980s was.

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