


Or does it? Rumours abounded about what the player has to do to unlock access to the trailer. The game features the buggy, but not the trailer. Most famously, the cover of Lunar Jetman features a moon buggy towing a trailer. Older Than the NES: Numerous rumors surrounded the works of Ultimate Play the Game, later known as Rare.Please do not confuse this for an Urban Fantasy edition of The Legend of Zelda. For more information, check out Pop Fiction, an excellent MythBusters-type show on this very subject, or Did You Know Gaming?, which features gaming urban legends and Easter Eggs. If a rumor is video game related but not gameplay related, see Pop Culture Urban Legends.
If the rumor is about something a creator allegedly said in an interview or fluff, see God Never Said That. Ĭompare Wild Mass Guessing, Viewer Name Confusion, and Fandom-Enraging Misconception. And helping propagate things was that the guides were often mistaken for ones by a very prolific writer from the same era named Mynock. FWAK stands for " False Wisdom and Knowledge." And as a side note, that isn't his only FWAK guide either (there was also a Final Fantasy IV version, which is widely agreed to be where a widespread rumor regarding Palom and Porom originated), and just to garner the reader's trust, also contained just enough legit info for completing the games. The most infamous of these is undoubtedly Eggnog's hidden character FWAK for Final Fantasy VI. Some games have so many rumors that they can result in the creation of a "FWAK", a parody/troll walkthrough containing intentionally fake "secrets".
