Category Archives: Featured

Atari Gamestation Go Review: Retro Gaming Goodness

Atari is basically the cool grandparent of video games — the one who still insists “back in my day, this was cutting-edge” while showing you a square that’s supposed to be a spaceship.

In the ‘70s and ‘80s, Atari was the name. They invented fun you could plug into your TV, brought arcade hits home, and gave us joysticks that doubled as medieval torture devices. Games were simple back then — you weren’t rescuing princesses or exploring open worlds, you were just a dot trying not to die from slightly faster dots.

Atari’s graphics looked like modern art drawn by a calculator, but somehow it worked. Pong? Two rectangles and a pixel. And yet, entire family feuds were born from that thing.

Then came the crash of 1983, when Atari released E.T., a game so bad it practically buried the entire industry — literally, in a desert. But hey, legends never die. Today, Atari lives on as that retro logo you see on t-shirts, reminding everyone of a time when your imagination had better graphics than your console.

Dokken CD Collection Run-through

Dokken is the musical equivalent of a can of Aqua Net that learned to shred. They’re what happens when four guys from the ‘80s collectively decide that subtlety is for wimps and that every chorus must sound like it’s being sung from the top of a burning mountain.

Frontman Don Dokken had hair so majestic it probably had its own tour manager, while guitarist George Lynch played solos so fast they could melt the ozone layer. Together, they created an unstoppable force of power chords, falsettos, and enough emotional angst to fill a dozen MTV power ballads.

Their songs were all about heartbreak, rebellion, and occasionally fighting dream demons (thanks to Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors), because apparently Freddy Krueger respected their riffs.

In short, Dokken was that glorious moment in rock history when leather pants, neon lights, and guitar solos longer than your commute all made perfect sense — and we’re better for it.

Lamborghini Murcielago Roadster Is a Wild Exotic Supercar

The Lamborghini Murciélago Roadster is basically what happens when someone says, “I want a car that sounds like an earthquake and costs as much as a small castle — but could also give me a sunburn.”

This wild Italian bull looks like it was designed by a team of caffeinated origami masters who hate subtlety. It’s got scissor doors that make every grocery run feel like a red carpet event, an exhaust note that could wake the dead (and make them jealous), and an engine so loud it doubles as a relationship test.

Driving one is like wrestling a thunderstorm while wearing designer sunglasses — thrilling, terrifying, and guaranteed to make pedestrians whip out their phones. And that soft top? Oh, it’s there mostly for decoration. Putting it on takes longer than most relationships last, so you’ll just leave it off and pray it doesn’t rain.

In short: the Murciélago Roadster is a 600-horsepower middle finger to practicality, and it’s glorious.

More Stupidly Expensive $$$ & Rare SWITCH GAMES

Video about more stupidly expensive & rare nintendo switch games.

GAMES SHOWN:
Dust: An Elysian Tail
Steredenn: Binary Stars
Star Wars Knights Of The Old Republic II: The Sith Lords
Tinykin
Contra: Operation Galuga [Convention Exclusive]
Haak
Stern Pinball Arcade
The Flame In The Flood
Evoland: Legendary Edition
Blazing Chrome (NEW)

REMINDER: Download the Whatnot app and MJR fans get $20 off your first purchase (can be used anywhere on the app). Go get those games, vinyl records, action figures, shoes & more! https://whatnot.com/invite/metaljesusrocks

#whatnotpartner

Stupidly Expensive $$$ & Rare SWITCH Games

I’ve been collecting Nintendo SWITCH games since 2017 and I’m surprised to see many of them have become stupidly expensive $$$ & rare. What is YOUR most valuable physical Switch game?

GAMES SHOWN:

Shantae And The Pirate’s Curse
Fast RMX (SEALED)
RXN (Limited Edition)
Worms: W.M.D
Baldur’s Gate 1 & 2 Enhanced Edition
Mushihimesama [Collector’s Edition]
Outlast Bundle Of Terror
Outlast 2
Thimbleweed Park (Big Box Edition)
Deathsmiles I & II [Love Max Edition]

Games That Don’t Hate Your Wallet

Trying to save money when buying video games can feel like a stealth mission worthy of Solid Snake himself. The key is patience: resisting the urge to grab a new release on day one often pays off, since most games drop in price within a few months. Seasonal sales like Steam’s Summer Sale, PlayStation’s holiday deals, and Nintendo’s occasional eShop discounts can turn a $60 game into a $20 steal if you’re willing to wait. Subscriptions like Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation Plus Extra, or even old-school rental services can also stretch your dollar, letting you play a huge library of games for the cost of a single purchase. And don’t overlook secondhand options—local game shops, pawn stores, and even garage sales can hide hidden gems at bargain-bin prices.

Another smart tactic is to go digital in moderation. Digital storefronts often feature flash sales and bundle deals, but physical copies can be resold or traded in, giving you some of your money back when you’re done. Keeping an eye on price-tracking websites or apps can help you snag a deal the moment it appears, and stacking coupons, loyalty points, or credit card rewards can sweeten the pot. Above all, building a backlog of games you already own but haven’t played is the ultimate money-saver—after all, the cheapest game is the one you don’t have to buy yet. With a little strategy and patience, you can keep your collection growing without letting your wallet go full Game Over.

Top 20 Best Selling Nintendo Switch Games (SO FAR in 2025)

The Nintendo Switch is awesome because it’s basically the Swiss Army knife of gaming consoles—one minute it’s a handheld you’re sneaking into bed like contraband candy, the next it’s a full-blown living room party machine that somehow convinces grandma to play Mario Kart like a Formula 1 racer. It’s the only device where you can slay dragons on the bus, build islands during your lunch break, and then smack your best friend with a virtual shell in the same evening, all without burning out your TV or your social life. In short, it’s gaming’s ultimate shape-shifter—half-console, half-handheld, all chaos.

Here are the Top 20 Best-Selling Nintendo Switch Games of All Time as of ~March-April 2025, based primarily on data from NintendoLife, VGChartz plus Nintendo’s financials.

Rank Game Units Sold (Millions)
1 Mario Kart 8 Deluxe ~ 68.20 Nintendo Life+1
2 Animal Crossing: New Horizons ~ 47.82 Nintendo Life+1
3 Super Smash Bros. Ultimate ~ 36.24 Nintendo Life+1
4 The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild ~ 32.81 Nintendo Life+1
5 Super Mario Odyssey ~ 29.28 Nintendo Life+1
6 Pokémon Scarlet / Violet ~ 26.79 Nintendo Life+1
7 Pokémon Sword / Shield ~ 26.72 Nintendo Life+1
8 The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom ~ 21.73 Nintendo Life+1
9 Super Mario Party ~ 21.16 Nintendo Life+1
10 New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe ~ 18.25 Nintendo Life+1
11 Nintendo Switch Sports ~ 16.27 VGChartz+1
12 Super Mario Bros. Wonder ~ 16.03 VGChartz+1
13 Ring Fit Adventure ~ 15.38 VGChartz+1
14 Pokémon: Let’s Go, Pikachu / Eevee ~ 15.07 VGChartz+1
15 Pokémon Brilliant Diamond / Shining Pearl ~ 15.06 VGChartz+1
16 Pokémon Legends: Arceus ~ 14.83 VGChartz+1
17 Luigi’s Mansion 3 ~ 14.25 VGChartz+1
18 Mario Party Superstars ~ 14.00 VGChartz+1
19 Splatoon 2 ~ 13.60 VGChartz+1
20 Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury ~ 13.47 VGChartz+1

 

Vinyl Collecting ticking TIME BOMB – A WARNING for every collector 😲

O noble disc of grooves both black and round,
Thy cardboard sleeve doth smell of musty dreams.
I dig through crates where dusty gems are found,
Each crackle sings of bygone sonic schemes.

The thrill of thrift shops—oh, my beating heart!
A dollar bin may hide a treasure rare.
A polka album? Sure, I’ll call it art—
Even warped jazz can make me stop and stare.

I boast of pressings “first” to all my friends,
Though half my finds sound like a frying pan.
The needle pops, the music squeaks and bends,
Yet still I cheer, a happy vinyl stan.

For digital may sparkle, crisp and clean,
But vinyl hums with ghosts of what has been.

BYD’s Yangwang U9 Xtreme hits 308MPH, now the world’s fastest production car

Driving over 300 miles per hour is like convincing a hurricane to give you a piggyback ride while you try to drink a latte. The world stops behaving like “scenery” and starts behaving like a smeared oil painting someone sneezed on—trees become green streaks, road signs flash past so fast they might as well be subliminal messages, and your face feels like it’s trying to migrate to the back of your skull.

Your car, meanwhile, is having a loud and existential conversation with physics. Every bolt is screaming “WHY ARE WE DOING THIS?!” while the tires grip the pavement with the desperate enthusiasm of a cat clinging to a bathtub edge. Even the air itself is offended, punching the vehicle with invisible fists of drag. Blink once, and you’ve traveled a football field; blink twice, and you’ve crossed a county line. At that speed, “oops” isn’t just a mistake—it’s an autobiography.