

(he may start with anxious ape but then he moves to a new starting position move. Now you know what moves defeat what, you must fill out the stances.Īnyways so basically get you pen and paper ready and wait for the monkey into the second position. So the first one reads as Anxious Ape defeats Bobbing Baboon etc, You wont need to do this as i have provided it for u :) below I have 7 in total as follows ( D is for defeats, and AA is anxious ape, DM is drunken monkey etc).

Other wise how to do it, is to do a small grid like chart i.e AA for anxious ape, DM for drunken monkey, i copied this chart from a walkthru page onto paper and filled it in he put win1 and win2 i didnt find out the second moves to win.īut if u write down these moves u can see what defeats what. i wasnt able to figure out how to screen record it as my screen recorder couldnt capture the play screen. Monkey kombat is annoying but i think its worth it to do it yourself, the best way is if you are able to screen record and just draw a bunch of times and watch the monkeys starting stance and pause it. But at least now you can enjoy some of his finest work without donating to his disgusting cause.Hi i just completed Monkey Kombat the other day and have the save file, i could also take a pic of my notes in chart form if u are really desperate. Curiously, the first Monkey Island's insults were penned by notorious sci-fi author Orson Scott Card, who later went on to co-write Shadow Complex and restrict rights to gay people. This browser-based version contains all the insult swordfights from Monkey Islands 1 & 3, as the second game skipped out on the mini-game, while Escape from Monkey Island's "Monkey Kombat" was essentially the same game with primate onomatopoeias, which wasn't nearly as funny. It's a rather simple match game at heart, but the banter is genuinely clever and much of the game is just training for the final boss where it's revealed that every response has a double meaning that needs to be paired with an all new set of puns.

For those not familiar with insult swordfighting, it involves collecting a series of wisecracks and retorts from sharp-tongued pirates before you can best them in a game of wordplay. Now the infamous insult swordfighting can be relived for free in browser form thanks to dedicated modder Karza.

Arguably classic adventure game series Monkey Island's most well known bit involved a quip-based spin on combat in which you fought malevolent scallywags with your rapier wit rather than your, well, rapier.
