You can also view a spreadsheet of most, if not all, of the games Jon has streamed here, and the many, many games in Jon's game collection here. Also affiliated with the stream is an Image Booru for stream fan-art, which can be perused here. These streams have led to some.interesting in-jokes, such as a full-blown multiverse of "Alt-Jons" and other miscellaneous characters large enough to warrant a dedicated fanwiki, which can be found here. Signature among the varying types of streams he does are "Game Clearing" streams, where he attempts to beat as many of the unfinished games in his MASSIVE collection as he can, and various types of "Fortune Cookie" streams, where Jon rolls a set number of randomly-selected games (usually 5, with additional options added by whomever is commentating with him), and then puts up a poll to see which one the stream audience wants to see him play. In addition to his Let's Plays, he also did an occasional brief review series called "You Should Play/Avoid This", starting with Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons.Īs of the mid-2010s, Jon has made streaming on his Twitch page his main source of content, with Let's Plays and other YouTube videos on the side. Although still incomplete after 10 years, Jon does still plan to finish it. He is perhaps more infamously known for his long-running Let's Play of Superman 64, a playthrough that, between the quality of the game in question, the significant amount of research and editing that goes into each episode, and real-life events surrounding the LP itself, such as a person Jon was trying to buy equipment from straight-up dying.yeah, it's no wonder Jon himself considers this LP cursed. Brawl matches with his friends, both of which are on indefinite hiatus, especially the former, due to having become burned out on Mario World romhacks as a whole. His most popular videos are his Super Mario World romhack LPs and his posts of Super Smash Bros. Many of his unique turns of phrase have gone viral, sometimes to his chagrin. Depending on both when a video he's done was made and whatever's happening in the game he's playing, his commentary style can alternate between wry, witty commentary and hysterical, profane, and incomprehensible rambling, sometimes in the same sentence. Many LPers, some of whom have become quite popular in their own right, list him as an inspiration. It became a huge hit, and one of the seminal LP videos on YouTube, eventually leading to him becoming a YouTube Partner on October 18, 2010. One day, he posted a two part LP of a level from Kaizo Mario World. Like most of them, he created a YouTube account to host the videos he made. Proton Jon (real name: Jonathan Carlton Wheeler) is a Canadian Let's Player, game collector, and Twitch streamer, part of the original group of Video Let's Players from Something Awful.
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