Starfox
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An entry of “Starfox”, according to Webster's Dictionary:
Main Entry: 1starfox
Pronunciation: stahr 'fäks
Japanese Pronounciation: Staafokkusu
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural star fox·es also fox
Usage: often attributive
Etymology: Compound word of roots “star” and “fox”
1 a : a certain constellation recognized by Roman cultures as being represented of their fox god, vulpus (often mistranslated as “faux god”)
2 : an elite division of space fighter pilots employed by the military forces of the planet Corneria, system of the Lylat star. Elite force consists of various species, including foxes, frogs, rabbits, dogs, obscure bird creatures, etcetera.
Starfox, although currently accepted as a well known video game franchise, actually started out as a childrens' television show in the mid 1960's. The primary factor that made the Starfox show stick out from other shows was the fact that rather than using popular hand-drawn animation style of the time, the Starfox show was due to use the then-impressive clay-animation technology. Headed by Japanese producer Hideo Kojima, Starfox was started in the attempts of competing with another popular kids' show of the time, Rocky and Bullwinkle. Unfortunately, however, the ambitious show failed after two episodes, and it went off the air – right when they were about to have a highly anticipated special episode, “Starfox meets Wallace and Gromit”.
Starfox remained as a relatively unknown franchise until later on, as computer technology picked up and early video games were being sold into homes. It was then that entertainment software development and production organization Atari purchased the rights to the decade-old Starfox franchise in the hopes of utilizing the previously known name for the purposes of justifying a video game whereby pixelated animals would pilot space ships and blow each other up. The disbanded and scattered owners of the original claymation TV show trademark gladly gave Atari the rights for somewhere around twenty five cents (they needed to use a pay phone at the time). Atari hired some computer nerds randomly selected from a nearby sci-fi convention to develop and publish their game – but not before changing the name from “Starfox” to the the highly similar “Solar Fox”. This was done so as to avoid using the overly used science-fiction franchise marketing method of incrementing “star” onto whatever other word (such as “trek”). Specifically, Atari did not want to garner any attention to themselves for suspected copying of the then-popular movie, “Star Wars – a New Hope”.
“Solar Fox” proved to be a relative success, receiving high reviews from critics but unfortunately never became as well known as other “classics” of the time, such as Asteroids, Missile Command, or Adventure. Several Atari development officials proposed merging one of their already well-known franchises together with Starfox, preferably with the already popular game Adventure to form Starfox Adventures, but when Atari officials suddenly began systematically committing ritual suicide during the Great Video game Market Crash of 1983, the project failed to materialize and was dropped.
Starfox never saw the light of day again until a militant Japanese faction known as Nintendo invaded the American homefront. Nintendo's primary agenda was to rekindle the Japanese/American conflict of World War II and to reinstate the Japanese imperial rule, with a man by the name of Hiroshi Yamauchi as their emperor.
Nintendo's primary means of warfare was the indoctrination of America's youth by way of computer games and Japanese rock music. However, their campaign did not last long. After the oriental militants' scattered forces were broken up by riot police and their few stockpiles of actual weapons and munitions were confiscated, the survivors of Nintendo soon found themselves broken and penniless. The distribution of their video games was the only thing that proved to sustain them. They went on to gain some wealth by sales of the NES, a mind control apparatus that had lost its practical usage for brainwashing but kept little kids entertained. After-effectual zombie hordes of the NES's brain-degenerating effects can still be seen today, even on the internet, with websites such as NES world and NES city.
It was by pure luck that the Nintendo guerrillas discovered a surviving Atari manager, the likes of whom had some legal say in the ownership of the Starfox franchise around which this article revolves. The Nintendo hitmen bought the franchise from him in exchange for a certain alcoholic beverage (this manager, by the way, was at this point in his life a homeless vagabond). The rest of Starfox's history was Nintendo's history. Nintendo has since developed numerous mind control software pieces based around the starfox story and characters, with subliminal messages telling the now-long-since-past-desensitized kids to rebel against their parents and do drugs.
[edit] Yiffy Scandal
The ongoing homosexual relationship between Fox McCloud and Slippy toad (two of the most prominent actors in the Star Fox series) has resulted in multiple confrontations with Christian fundamentalists, including one attempt by the Westboro Baptist Church to ban the series with a Constitutional Amendment. President George W. Bush endorsed this measure (after being persuaded by Jerry Falwell waving his hands and chanting in some undisclosed Semitic language), but it failed in every state except Texas, which was the only state deciding the measure by Diebold ballot.
When asked about this, 008 (No last name) told reporters to "Go fuck yourselves, I'm trying to take a piss."
Shortly thereafter, Krystal (who has no last name, indeed only adopted the name of her place of captivity in the majority of Star Fox Adventures because her memory had been erased) went public with a statement that Fox McCloud was "not satisfying her in bed" because he was "out with the guys all the time," and that she wanted him to "come home to her." Whether Krystal is unaware of Fox's affair with Slippy, or simply in denial, is not clear. Either way, she can't enjoy her sandwich.




