The idea was bound for success: all of your favorite Nintendo characters beating the shit out of each other with bats, hammers, shells, swords, Poké Balls, and much, much more? The game was a dream ...
Fifteen years after it graced the opening credits of Shrek, the song is experiencing a strange resurgence, cropping up in the oddest of circumstances. Except now, the version you’re likely to hear ...
On May 4, 1999, power-pop quintet Smash Mouth released their career-defining anthem and sports stadium favorite, "All Star." The song hit No. 4 on the Hot 100, and the band's subsequent album Astro ...
Travis Verbil is a Staff Writer at DualShockers. Outside of writing, he is a musician from Queens, NY. He enjoys the New York Mets, tabletop gaming, and Donkey Kong lore. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate ...
Chris is a writer currently based in the Philadelphia area. They are currently writing for film website Flixist, podcasting for Marvel News Desk, and were an editorial intern for Paste Magazine's ...
There are many, many YouTube videos of Smash Mouth performing their hit single "All Star," but one that stands out is a live performance from June 1999, a month after the song's release. During a show ...
The newsworthy Sephiroth Super Smash Bros. Ultimate stream offered fans of the Nintendo fighting game a lot of information to be excited about. Final Fantasy VII's main antagonist is arriving as a DLC ...
There are few songs that have earned ongoing YouTube meme status: Toto’s “Africa”; Rick Astley’s “Never Going to Give You Up”; and best of all, Smash Mouth’s “All Star.” “All Star” didn’t reach ...
Nintendo's new Super Smash Bros. Ultimate trailer didn't have a backing track and you know what that means: The internet was ready to help out. Jackson Ryan was CNET's science editor, and a multiple ...
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