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What the Dub? is a 2021 multiplayer party game developed and published by Wide Right Interactive. [1] It was released on April 8, 2021, to positive reviews. [2] [3] A follow-up, RiffTrax: The Game, based on and featuring cast members from RiffTrax, was released in May 2022. [4]
RiffTrax: The Game is a 2022 multiplayer party game developed and published by Wide Right Interactive. [1] A follow-up to Wide Right's What the Dub?, the game is based on and features the cast members of RiffTrax, an online comedy group whose performers make commentary over bad movies and public domain shorts, inspired by the television show Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Wide Right, a.k.a. 47 Wide Right, was Scott Norwood's missed 47-yard field goal attempt for the Buffalo Bills at the end of Super Bowl XXV on January 27, 1991, as described by sportscaster Al Michaels. The missed field goal resulted in the game being won by the New York Giants. The phrase "wide right" has since become synonymous with the game ...
A potentially game-tying, 44-yard field goal attempt by Bills' kicker Tyler Bass with 1:47 remaining sailed wide to the right of the goalposts in a crushing 27-24 loss to the visiting Kansas City ...
Norwood misses a 47-yard, game-winning field goal wide right in the final moments of the Bills' 20-19 loss to the New York Giants in Super Bowl XXV. - Icon Sportswire/Getty Images
Developed with Wide Right Interactive, [52] and was released on May 5, 2022 on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4 and 5, Xbox One and Xbox Series X and Series S, as well as Steam. References [ edit ]
Bass' 44-yard field goal attempt swerved wide right, much like Norwood's infamous attempt in Super Bowl XXV 33 years ago. After that, the Chiefs got the first down they needed to wrap up a 27-24 win .
The game is known for Bills placekicker Scott Norwood's last-second missed field goal attempt that went wide right of the uprights, starting a four-game losing streak in the Super Bowl for the Bills. The game became the first (and so far only) Super Bowl decided by one point and the first Super Bowl in which neither team committed a turnover.