"I looked up the character on Madness Combat Wiki."
| Fan Type | Value | Notes | |----------|-------|-------| | (watched a few episodes) | Moderate | Use for episode guides and character introductions, but avoid lore pages until you’ve seen more. | | Long-time fan | High | Great for referencing small details (e.g., which episode introduced the Dragunov ), finding developer commentary, and tracking gore stats. | | Project Nexus player | Mixed | Useful for item and enemy lists, but beware that game mechanics (like "Magnetism" or "Chef’s Knife") are mixed with series trivia. | | Lore theorist | Essential | Even with its flaws, it’s the most complete compilation of Nevada’s weird metaphysics – just double-check primary sources. |
Documentation of the series' unique elements, such as the Improbability Drive and the mysterious organization known as the A.A.H.W. .
The Madness Combat Wiki serves as a central hub for the community to document everything from the main episodes to obscure spin-offs.
A standout feature is the exhaustive list of weapons (from the iconic Tactical Katana to the Pneumatic Stake Driver ) and the detailed "Deaths" sections on character pages, which catalog every on-screen fatality. This appeals to fans analyzing choreography or power-scaling.
The wiki catalogs every detail of the series, which began in 2002 with Madness Combat 1 . Its coverage extends across several categories:
The wiki covers flash games, the Project Nexus RPG, soundtracks (by Cheshyre), and even fan-made animations that Krinkels has endorsed. The episode guide includes production notes, runtime differences between Newgrounds and YouTube uploads, and links to high-bitrate versions.
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