Jerkass - Both the neighbor and his mother.Don't forget Rottweiler himself in a speedo for the entirety of the second game. Rottweiler, a fat old woman with very hairy legs, also spends all her screen time in a bikini. She also has ungodly muscle mass and a man's face. She has breasts literally the size of watermelons.
Not to be confused with a cartoon series of a similar name about demons from Hell. The only US release of the series has been on PC. The second game saw a port for the Nintendo DS but again, only in Europe. The first game saw slightly enhanced ports to the Nintendo Gamecube and Microsoft Xbox though they were only released in Europe. The game takes place aboard the cruise ship as well as stops in China, India and Mexico. Rottweiler, the neighbor's overbearing mother and her yapping dog. Tagging along this time are Olga, a female from the neighborhood that Rottweiler has a disturbing obsession with, Olgas's son, Mrs. The game was followed up by Neighbours From Hell 2: On Vacation in 2004 which sees Woody follow the neighbor on his trip around the world to cause even more grief.
The results are broadcast as a television show. Woody decides to call up his TV producer friend and the two secretly break into the neighbor's house, wire hidden cameras in every room and Woody proceeds to break into the house repeatedly to pull various pranks on Rottweiler. The plot of the game revolves around Woody, a generally nice guy until his obnoxious neighbor, Rottweiler finally annoys Woody to the point that he snaps. The name of the episodes aren't official but describe the main subject of the episode.Neighbours From Hell (or Neighbors From Hell in the US) is a point-and click game released by Jo Wood Interactive in 2003. The soundtrack is also very similar, including the dramatic twist music in every episode.
Others, such as The Most Evil Creature of Them All, are not specific references to episodes but rather mockery of the show overall, which sometimes is extremely overdramatic and always have a twist. The Gambler has multiple references to episodes of The Twilight Zone, as well as a lot of original scenes. While some episodes clearly are references to specific episodes of The Twilight Zone (for example Last Man on Earth, which has almost the exact story as Time Enough At Last but takes it a bit further in irony), others are less specific. Most obviously, the opening sequence to the two are very similar: the camera drifts through space, with several strange objects flying around, with a host (originally Rod Serling) introducing the viewer to the strange area of The Twilight Zone (or in Futurama's version, one enters The Scary Door). While referencing multiple shows and films, the main reference to The Scary Door is the classic TV series The Twilight Zone, famous for its dramatic stories with big twists by the end, often revealing that everything was entirely the other way around of what one would have expected, or introducing extreme irony for example in Time Enough At Last, a man who loves reading enjoys the fact that he is the sole survivor of human race as he finally gets time to read - but then he breaks his glasses. The title card to the 1960's series The Twilight Zone.