


“From Highland High to Burger World, help the boys avoid things that suck, find things that rule, and be sure to stop along the way to break something,” reads the game’s manual. They’re on a quest simply to become cool, and they think joining local criminal Todd’s gang will help them achieve this.

But the best is undoubtedly Virtual Stupidity, a point-and-click adventure released in August 1995, just as the show was entering its sixth season.īeavis and Butt-head’s famous lack of ambition is reflected in the game’s story. Among these are Bunghole in One, a crazy golf simulator, and Little Thingies, a collection of minigames. This resulted in a movie, a merchandise empire, and a number of Beavis and Butt-head videogames. But this controversy only inspired more people to watch it, and its popularity continued to grow. Like anything vaguely subversive, Beavis and Butt-head were blamed for a number of real-world crimes, forcing MTV to bury them in a late night time slot. The violence, childish humour, and nihilistic tone drew a lot of criticism at the time-mostly from people it wasn’t aimed at-but that didn’t stop the pair from becoming unlikely icons of ‘90s pop culture. It stars a pair of idiotic, immoral, heavy metal-loving teenagers who spend their days watching music videos, flipping burgers, and terrorising their suburban hometown of Highland, Texas. On a quest for coolness in Virtual Stupidity.Ĭreated by Mike Judge, Beavis and Butt-head is an animated sitcom that originally aired on MTV from 1993 to 1997. Revisiting Beavis and Butt-head’s forgotten point-and-click adventure
