Bart Simpson's Escape From Camp Deadly

Bart Simpson's Escape from Camp Deadly is a platform game for the Game Boy. Developed by Imagineering, it was published by Acclaim in North America in 1991. The game was released in Europe in 1992 and Japan in 1993. In Bart Simpson's Escape from Camp Deadly, the player controls Bart from the television series The Simpsons as he escapes from an unpleasant summer camp run by ruthless counselors. The plot is similar to that of the Simpsons episode "Kamp Krusty". Critics gave the game mixed to negative reviews.

Read more about Bart Simpson's Escape From Camp Deadly:  Plot and Gameplay, Development and Release, Reception

Famous quotes containing the words simpson, escape, camp and/or deadly:

    The sun is shining.
    The shadows of the lovers have disappeared.
    They are all eyes; they have some demand on me—
    They want me to be more serious than I want to be.
    —Louis Simpson (b. 1923)

    It was at a particular moment in the history of my own rages that I saw the Western world conditioned by the images of Marx, Darwin and Freud; and Marx, Darwin and Freud are the three most crashing bores of the Western world. The simplistic popularization of their ideas has thrust our world into a mental straitjacket from which we can only escape by the most anarchic violence.
    William Golding (b. 1911)

    The Indians invited us to lodge with them, but my companion inclined to go to the log camp on the carry. This camp was close and dirty, and had an ill smell, and I preferred to accept the Indians’ offer, if we did not make a camp for ourselves; for, though they were dirty, too, they were more in the open air, and were much more agreeable, and even refined company, than the lumberers.... So we went to the Indians’ camp or wigwam.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Give us a good cheap twenty-four-hour day,
    No part of which we’d have to waste, I say,
    And who knows where we can’t get! Wasting time
    In sleep or slowness is the deadly crime.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)