

Neighbors From Hell has a very simple control scheme. If you can complete the episodes in a season nearly perfectly (an audience score of 90% or better), you'll receive the "Golden Neighbor Award." Plus, the audience's reaction will be lukewarm applause and we don't want that the more pranks the neighbor sets off in a row, the better score you'll receive with your audience.

You have to do this without being caught, because if he catches you, he'll beat you up and you'll have to restart the mission. The basic premise behind Neighbors From Hell is to collect objects around your neighbor's home and use them to produce a series of pranks that the neighbor will set off. Neighbors From Hell uses that concept and gives you control of your own reality show star, allowing you to direct him to produce a series of pranks on his neighbor that are cruel, painful, and really, really funny. If you've seen any reality television shows, you know the basic premise is to take "real" people and turn them into television stars, often by having them perform a variety of embarrassing or demeaning activities. Neighbors From Hell features cartoonish 3D characters and apartment building settings, in line with its lighthearted, slapstick objectives. If the player's character is ever caught in the act of setting one of these traps, however, there will be heck to pay. The better the sneaky trick, the louder the audience will cheer. Throughout the game's 14 episodes, the main goal is to sneak into different rooms and booby-trap everyday items that the neighbor might use, causing him to fall for one dirty trick after another.Įach time the neighbor is caught in one of the player's traps, a simulated studio audience will guffaw and applaud with approval.

Players view a cross-section of a residential building, where their character lives with a neighbor. Neighbors From Hell is a comical game of practical jokes, presented as a spoof of "reality" television shows.
