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Encyclopedia > Doctor N. Gin
N. Gin

Doctor N. Gin in Crash of the Titans.
Game series Crash Bandicoot
First game Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back (1997)
Creator(s) Naughty Dog
Designer(s) Charles Zembillas
Joe Pearson
Voice actor(s) (English) Brendan O'Brien (1997-99)[1][2]
Corey Burton (2001)[3]
Quinton Flynn (2003-04)[4]
Nolan North (2005-present)
Voice actor(s) (Japanese) Kazuhiro Nakata (1997-2004)
Mitsuru Ogata (2005-present)

Doctor N. Gin (ドクター エヌ ジン Dokutā Enu Jin?, spelled N-Gin in the Radical games) is a fictional video game character and secondary villain in the Crash Bandicoot series of video games. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Crash of the Titans is an action-adventure game published by Sierra Entertainment and developed by Radical Entertainment for the Wii, Xbox 360, PlayStation 2, and PlayStation Portable; the Nintendo DS and Game Boy Advance versions of the game were developed by Amaze Entertainment. ... Crash Bandicoot is a popular video game series created by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin. ... Crash Bandicoot 2 Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back is a platform game made by Naughty Dog for the PlayStation. ... Naughty Dog is an American video game company founded by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin in 1986. ... Joseph Joe Frank Pearson (born 19 September 1877, died 1946) was a football (soccer) player in the early years of professional football in England, who played for Aston Villa from Aug. ... The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ... Brendan OBrien is an actor who voiced several Crash Bandicoot characters during its earlier years when in production of Naughty Dog, Brendan voiced Dr. Nitrus Brio, Dr. N. Gin and Tiny Tiger. ... Corey Burton (born August 3, 1955), is an animation voice actor. ... Quinton Joseph Flynn (known to friends and colleagues as Q) (born October 10, 1964 in Cleveland, Ohio), is an American voice actor, actor, and writer. ... Nolan Ramsey North (October 31, 1970 - ) is an American voice actor born in New Haven, Connecticut. ... Kazuhiro Nakata , formerly credited 中田 和宏, born March 19, 1958 in Nagasaki) is a seiyÅ« who works for Ken Production. ... Mitsuru Ogata ) (March 24, 1961 - ) is a male seiyÅ« from Aomori Prefecture affiliated with Mausu Promotion. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Fictional character. ... Crash Bandicoot is a popular video game series created by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin. ...


Doctor N. Gin is a defense industry phycisist-turned-cyborg who usually acts as a boss in the series. He is Doctor Neo Cortex's right-hand man (replacing Doctor Nitrus Brio), helping him create numerous doomsday weapons and other unpleasant devices virtually without question, regardless of the consequences (although he is seen working away from Cortex in Crash Twinsanity). His personality and appearance are based on that of the stereotypical deranged henchman, with the addition of effeminate and masochistic mannerisms later in the series. The defense industry refers primarily to: Defense contractors: business organizations or individuals that provide products or services to a defense department of a government. ... For other uses, see Cyborg (disambiguation). ... Flag Ship from the video game Gorf A boss is an enemy-based challenge in video games that, once encountered, stops the games progression until the player is able either to surmount the enemy or is thwarted by it. ... This article is about the video game character. ... This is a list of characters appearing in the video game series Crash Bandicoot. ... Crash Twinsanity, released in Japan as Crash Bandicoot 5: Eeee Crash to Cortex no Yabou?!? , lit. ... This article includes a list of works cited or a list of external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. ... Flogging demonstration at Folsom Street Fair 2004. ...

Contents

Conception and creation

Jason Rubin is credited for the concept of Doctor N. Gin. N. Gin has a live missile in his head, which can give him a headache when it becomes active. Coincidentally, Jason Rubin suffered from chronic migraine headaches.[5] N. Gin's name is a play on the word "engine", referring to his occupation as a physicist. Jason Rubin (b. ... For other uses, see Engine (disambiguation). ...


Actor portrayal

During the Naughty Dog era, N. Gin is depicted as having a somewhat nasal voice, which is digitally altered to include what appears to be a second, high-pitched voice echoing N. Gin's regular voice, giving his voice a robotic quality. During this period, N. Gin is voiced by Brendan O'Brien,[1][2] who voiced a number of other characters in the series during the Naughty Dog era. In Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex, N. Gin is voiced by Corey Burton (who also voices N. Tropy in the same game),[3] and the robotic effect is missing. N. Gin is voiced by Quinton Flynn in Crash Nitro Kart and Crash Twinsanity.[4] Once more, the robotic effect to his voice is present, but in comparison to his previous appearances, it is not as noticeable. N. Gin is voiced by TMNT star Nolan North in Crash Tag Team Racing and Crash of the Titans, and by Kazuhiro Nakata in the Japanese dub of the series from Cortex Strikes Back to Twinsanity, with Mitsuru Ogata (who also dubbed over Nitrus Brio in the same series) taking over the role as of Tag Team Racing. Brendan OBrien is an actor who voiced several Crash Bandicoot characters during its earlier years when in production of Naughty Dog, Brendan voiced Dr. Nitrus Brio, Dr. N. Gin and Tiny Tiger. ... Corey Burton (born August 3, 1955), is an animation voice actor. ... This is a list of characters appearing in the video game series Crash Bandicoot. ... Quinton Joseph Flynn (known to friends and colleagues as Q) (born October 10, 1964 in Cleveland, Ohio), is an American voice actor, actor, and writer. ... Crash Nitro Kart, released in Japan as Crash Bandicoot: Bakuso! Nitro Kart ) is a racing game for the PlayStation 2, GameCube and Xbox consoles that was released in 2003. ... Crash Twinsanity, released in Japan as Crash Bandicoot 5: Eeee Crash to Cortex no Yabou?!? , lit. ... For the 1990 film, see Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (film). ... Nolan Ramsey North (October 31, 1970 - ) is an American voice actor born in New Haven, Connecticut. ... Crash Tag Team Racing, released in Japan as Crash Bandicoot: Gatchanko World ) is a racing game for three of the four sixth generation video game consoles and the PlayStation Portable. ... Crash of the Titans is an action-adventure game published by Sierra Entertainment and developed by Radical Entertainment for the Wii, Xbox 360, PlayStation 2, and PlayStation Portable; the Nintendo DS and Game Boy Advance versions of the game were developed by Amaze Entertainment. ... Kazuhiro Nakata , formerly credited 中田 和宏, born March 19, 1958 in Nagasaki) is a seiyū who works for Ken Production. ... Mitsuru Ogata ) (March 24, 1961 - ) is a male seiyū from Aomori Prefecture affiliated with Mausu Promotion. ...


Characteristics

Personality

Like most of Doctor Cortex's henchmen, N. Gin follows Cortex's every order without question, more so than Tiny and Dingodile, as N. Gin is Doctor Cortex's right-hand man, replacing Doctor Nitrus Brio after the events of Crash Bandicoot. However, like Nitrus Brio before him, N. Gin is less impulsive than Cortex or Uka Uka, preferring to think over the situation rather than rushing to a solution, which usually leads to a loud rebuttal by his psychopathic superiors whenever he questions their way of doing things, as shown in the opening cinematics of Crash Bandicoot 2 and Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex, the latter in which N. Gin actually contemplates the fact that Crash Bandicoot might simply be too powerful for him and the others to defeat.[6] Nevertheless, his words of wisdom don't always fall on deaf ears, as Doctor Cortex occasionally takes N. Gin's advice into consideration if it benefits him in any way.[7] Tiny Tiger , erroneously named Taz Tiger in the NTSC pause screen of Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back) is a fictional video game character and secondary villain in the Crash Bandicoot series. ... Dingodile ) is a fictional video game character and secondary villain in the Crash Bandicoot series. ... This is a list of characters appearing in the video game series Crash Bandicoot. ... This article is about the first game in the series. ... Uka Uka , a. ... Crash Bandicoot, or simply Crash, is a popular video game character of Naughty Dogs Crash Bandicoot series created by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin. ...


N. Gin's behavior becomes more deranged by Crash Nitro Kart and Crash Twinsanity, becoming prone to fits of giggling. In a deleted scene from Crash Twinsanity, it is shown that he has developed somewhat of a crush on Crash's sister, Coco, as evidenced when Cortex disguises himself as Coco and is kidnapped by N. Gin as a result, who attempts to make "her" his sea bride.[8] No reference to this crush is made in the finished version of Twinsanity, rendering the crush non-canon. In Crash Tag Team Racing, Doctor N. Gin is depicted as a bipolar, masochistic,[9] suicidal,[10] and effeminate madman, prone to fits of yelling, sobbing, and giggling, and making doomsday weapons out of such odd items as fuzzy slippers.[11] He is also shown to have low self-esteem, at one point asking Crash to buy him a ballerina outfit, so that he can feel pretty.[12] N. Gin is shown to be even more unbalanced in Crash of the Titans, incoherently rambling over his factory's intercom and having a conversation with himself in his last scene, he possesses a somewhat effeminate side, proving by yelling and some mannerisms. N. Gin briefly shows a misogynistic side when he informs Crash of his sister's whereabouts, expressing disgust at the thought of girls.[13] This seems to contradict with a statement he makes over the intercom, in which he expresses a desire for women.[14] Coco Bandicoot is a fictional video game character and secondary protagonist in the Crash Bandicoot series. ... For other uses, see Bipolar. ... For other uses, see Suicide (disambiguation). ... Effeminacy is character trait of a male showing femininity, unmanliness, womanliness, weakness, softness and/or a delicacy, which contradicts traditional masculine, male gender roles. ... Maya Plisetskaya, prima ballerina of the Bolshoi Ballet from 1943 to 1960 and prima ballerina assoluta from 1960 to 1990. ... This box:      Misogyny (IPA: ) is hatred or strong prejudice against women; an antonym of philogyny. ...


Appearance

N. Gin during the Naughty Dog era

Doctor N. Gin is a stocky, red-haired (black in Crash Tag Team Racing and dark blue in Crash of the Titans) cyborg with only half a face. He wears an identical attire to Cortex, with a notable difference being a numerous amount of large bolts located all over his lab coat. A distinguishing feature of his is the large missile protruding from the right side of his head. After the incident that provided the missile, N. Gin reconstructed it as a life-support system, turning nearly half his head into metal. The missile is still live, and was only thought to activated only when N. Gin was stressed or angry, but as revealed in Tag Team Racing, he can activate the missile at will, usually to stabilize a vehicle. While the eye located on the non-mechanical side of his head is somewhat small, the eye on the other side of his face is large, circular, and with a small black pupil occupying it (although in Nitro Kart, this eye is replaced by a black electronic eye with a red pupil). In terms of height, N. Gin is somewhat shorter than Cortex, but appears to be as tall as him in Tag Team Racing. In the same game, N. Gin's skin takes on a grayish tone, as opposed to the pink/yellow of earlier games (Doctor Cortex once described N. Gin as "hav[ing] bad complexion). An alternate costume in the game depicts N. Gin in a ballerina outfit, bought by Crash to increase his self-esteem. In Crash of the Titans, N. Gin's skin and hair color take on a bluish scheme, and the pupil on the robotic half of his face is larger. Besides these differences, N. Gin looks similar to what he did in past games. According to the DS version of Titans, N. Gin is 1.25 meters tall (4 feet, 1.215 inches) and weighs 63 kilograms (138.915 pounds), putting his body mass index at 40.32 (morbidly obese range). Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ... Naughty Dog is an American video game company founded by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin in 1986. ... Crash Tag Team Racing, released in Japan as Crash Bandicoot: Gatchanko World ) is a racing game for three of the four sixth generation video game consoles and the PlayStation Portable. ... The human eye The pupil is the central transparent area (showing as black). ... Complexion describes ones physical appearance. ... For other uses, see Blue (disambiguation). ...


As a child in the Academy of Evil, N. Gin is shown to have a paper airplane stuck in his head, foreshadowing the head rocket later in his life. This is revealed in an unlockable piece of concept art in Crash Twinsanity.[15]


History

Past history

Like the rest of the characters in the series, N. Gin's exact age is uncertain. However, in a piece of unlockable concept art in Crash Twinsanity, N. Gin is shown to have gone to the same school as Neo Cortex and Nitrus Brio,[15] and thus is about the same age as the latter two. N. Gin's Peter Lorre-esque accent and polka theme in Crash of the Titans[16] suggest that he is of Austrian ancestry, though no other evidence of this exists in the games. In Crash of the Titans, N. Gin claims to have once had a superficial brother named George over his factory's intercom system. Peter Lorre (June 26, 1904 – March 23, 1964), born László Löwenstein, was an Hungarian[1] - Austrian - American actor frequently typecast as a sinister foreigner. ...


Before teaming up with Doctor Neo Cortex, N. Gin was a well-known physicist in the defense industry, though it is implied in the Game Boy Advance version of Crash of the Titans that he once worked at a stapler factory.[17] Due to a budget cut, one of his missile projects went awry and found itself lodged into N. Gin's head.[5] N. Gin has since stabalized the weapon, and went on to become Doctor Cortex's henchman one year after the events of Crash Bandicoot. A standard office stapler A Stapler combines together sheets of paper or other materials by driving a thin metal staple through the sheets and folding over the ends to secure the paper. ...


Present history

1997-1998

While helping Cortex study the power of their newly-found Master Crystal, N. Gin reveals that 25 Slave Crystals are needed along with the Master Crystal to harness the power of the upcoming planetary alignment and use it to enslave mankind.[18] When Cortex recruits Crash to retrieve the Crystals for him, Doctor N. Gin attempts to take them as the penultimate boss in the game. However, the weapons on N. Gin's mech turn out to be weak points, and Crash is easily able to toss Wumpa Fruit into the weapons, causing the mech to malfunction and self-destruct, leaving N. Gin floating in the vacuum of space. He is somehow able to reach Cortex's space station before the final boss battle, as evidenced by quotes said by Cortex before the battle against him.[19]


In Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped, N. Gin returns as the penultimate boss of the game. Under the orders of Uka Uka and Cortex, N. Gin is sent to eliminate the Bandicoots with his new double-phased mech, which starts out as a suit of mobile armor. When all of the weapons on the suit have been destroyed, the suit transforms into a space fighter and docks with a large weapon platform. After a battle with Coco and Pura on the Moon, N. Gin is once again sent flying into the vacuum of space. This article is about Earths moon. ...


2001-2004

In Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex, N. Gin is an attendee of Uka Uka's bad guy convention, and is ultimately the one who reveals the secret of Crunch Bandicoot, Cortex's new superweapon.[20] For the rest of the game, N. Gin serves as an obstacle in some of the levels. Crunch Bandicoot ) is a fictional video game character from the Crash Bandicoot series, and one of the main antagonists of Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex. ...


In Crash Twinsanity, N. Gin appears during the first boss battle, piloting the Mecha-Bandicoot in an attempt to eliminate Crash. When all of its weapons are destroyed, the Mecha-Bandicoot stomps a hole into the floor and falls into a cavern. N. Gin is later seen as the captain of his own battleship. At the crow's nest, N. Gin tries to destroy Crash again with a barrage of missiles, occasionally tossing a TNT Crate. This leads to the eventual collapse of the crow's nest, causng N. Gin to land on his head onto a pile of TNT Crates, causing a large explosion that sinks the battleship. N. Gin is last seen teamed up with N. Tropy and N. Brio, with all of them trying to steal the Evil Twins' riches. However, they are driven out by Spyro the Dragon. Crows Nest is the name of more than one place: Crows Nest, Indiana, United States Crows Nest, New South Wales, Australia Crows Nest, Queensland, Australia See also: Crowsnest Pass in Canada Crows Nest is also the name given to a structure on top of the mast of a ship... This is a list of characters appearing in the video game series Crash Bandicoot. ... This article is about the video game character. ...


2007-present

N. Gin makes a return appearance in Crash of the Titans. In his first scene, he is seen serving hot tea to Doctor Neo Cortex, who repeatedly spits it onto his face due to shock induced by upcoming events. N. Gin, being his usual masochistic self, takes great pleasure when this happens. When Cortex faces replacement, N. Gin, along with Cortex and Tiny Tiger, protest by praising Cortex's stationery.[21] N. Gin is next seen in his weapons factory, which appears on the outside as a version of the Statue of Liberty modelled after N. Gin. This factory constantly bombards the surrounding area with all kinds of explosives in an attempt to hinder Crash. Crash eventually finds a way inside through the statues "bottom". Inside the factory, N. Gin communicates to his workers through the factory intercom, usually to make announcements, sing inspirational songs, or alert the workers of Crash's prescence. In the factory's crown, N. Gin spends his days performing on his enormous pipe organ. When confronted by Crash and Aku Aku, N. Gin indirectly reveals to them that he has mixed feelings over Cortex's replacement to Nina. One side likes Doctor Cortex and the abuse he brings to him, and wishes for his return, while another side approves of Nina's new way of doing things, believing that she is a more efficient leader than Cortex. Eventually, the two sides reach a compromise, and tell Crash of Uka Uka's whereabouts in hopes that he will also free Cortex, planning to shower them with doom later on.[22][13] He is not seen in the game after that. For other monuments to freedom, see Monument of Liberty. ... This is a list of characters appearing in the video game series Crash Bandicoot. ...


Other appearances

N. Gin is a playable character in all three of the Crash racing titles, with his car usually being high in acceleration points.[2] In Crash Nitro Kart, N. Gin is one of the racers in Cortex's team, which pilots red vehicles.[4] At one point, N. Gin considers creating cybernetic sharks as new henchmen after racing Nash.[23] In Crash Tag Team Racing, N. Gin convinces Neo Cortex to join in the search for Von Clutch's missing Power Gems so that he can use Von Clutch's theme park as a new base of operations (although Cortex later claims the idea as his own).[7]


N. Gin has cameo appearances in the two Crash party games, appearing as an obstacle in a Ballistix minigame in Crash Bash, and appearing in the "Silhouette Quiz" minigame in Crash Boom Bang!. Crash Bash, released in Japan as Crash Bandicoot Carnival ) is a party game developed by Eurocom, the first Crash game not to be developed by Naughty Dog. ... For the Roxette album with similar name, see Crash! Boom! Bang! Crash, Boom, Bang! , Crash Bandicoot Festival) is a party game published by Sierra Entertainment and developed by Dimps for the Nintendo DS. It was released in Australia on February 11, 2006,[1] in Japan on July 20, 2006, in...


In Crash Bandicoot: The Huge Adventure, N. Gin serves as the second boss in the game, battling Crash in the skies with a weapon platform similar to the one he piloted in Warped. He is later merged with Doctor Cortex, Tiny and Dingodile, and becomes Mega-Mix. After chasing Crash down a space station hall, Mega-Mix is left inside the space station, which explodes with the villains in it. Crash Bandicoot: The Huge Adventure is a platform game made by Vicarious Visions for the Game Boy Advance. ...


See also

For other uses, see Bipolar. ... For other uses, see Cyborg (disambiguation). ... This article is about the video game character. ... This article includes a list of works cited or a list of external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. ... Peter Lorre (June 26, 1904 – March 23, 1964), born László Löwenstein, was an Hungarian[1] - Austrian - American actor frequently typecast as a sinister foreigner. ...

References

  1. ^ a b Naughty Dog (1998). Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped Instruction Booklet (in English). Sony Computer Entertainment America. 
  2. ^ a b c Naughty Dog (1999). Crash Team Racing Instruction Booklet (in English). Sony Computer Entertainment America. 
  3. ^ a b Traveller's Tales (2001). Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex Instruction Booklet (in English). Sony Computer Entertainment America. 
  4. ^ a b c Vicarious Visions (2003). Crash Nitro Kart Instruction Booklet (in English). Sony Computer Entertainment America. 
  5. ^ a b Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back Gallery. Retrieved on 2007-03-25.
  6. ^ Traveller's Tales. Crash Bandicoot: The Wratch of Cortex. Sony Computer Entertainment America. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: Uhhh... Uka Uka. Need I remind you that Crash always finds a way to defeat us? Maybe he's just too good for us. / Uka Uka: Enough excuses! You five idiots need to come up with one good plan! Or else...”
  7. ^ a b Radical Entertainment. Crash Tag Team Racing. Sierra Entertainment. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: Perhaps this is the answer to our dilemma. This strange theme park is fertile grounds for us to plant a new seed... of evil!! / Doctor Neo Cortex: Yes! A new sinister base, all the churros we can eat, and rid ourselves of the Bandicoots all at the same time!”
  8. ^ A deleted scene from the Crash Twinsanity level "High Sea Hi-Jinks". Retrieved on 2007-03-25.
  9. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash Tag Team Racing. Sierra Entertainment. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: Ow! That hurt! Thank you!”
  10. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash Tag Team Racing. Sierra Entertainment. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: You're trying to kill me, aren't you? How can I ever thank you?!”
  11. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash Tag Team Racing. Sierra Entertainment. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: It's not ready yet!! I'm doing my best!! Oh. It's you, Crash. I'm sorry, but Doctor Cortex is very insistent that I finish my latest creation as soon as possible. It is a weapon of horrible power, but I... can't finish it! Please, Crash! You've got to help me! Bring me the secret component! / Crash Bandicoot: Hoonevebinevieueh... / Doctor N. Gin: That's right! Fuzzy slippers!! Only the raw, uncontrollable fury of fuzzy slippers can bring my creation to life! Please, Crash! Find me the slippers, and I will reward you greatly.”
  12. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash Tag Team Racing. Sierra Entertainment. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: I'm crying... because... I'm not pretty! Please, Crash! Bring me something... that will make me pretty? I just can't live like this anymore!”
  13. ^ a b Radical Entertainment. Crash of the Titans. Sierra Entertainment. Wii. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: That's right, stupids! You need to go to Uka Uka's lab and stop him! That's where they make all the delicious mutants! Maybe your revolting sister is there, too. Eugh... girls...”
  14. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash of the Titans. Sierra Entertainment. Wii. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: Someone take out the trash, and by trash, I mean Crash! Hey, that rhymes. I should start a record label. Then I could get some chicks! I'm tired of monkeys!”
  15. ^ a b Twinsanity concept art. Retrieved on 2007-03-25.
  16. ^ Interview with Radical Entertainment. Retrieved on 2007-05-28.
  17. ^ Amaze Entertainment. Crash of the Titans. Sierra Entertainment. Game Boy Advance. (in English). “Aku Aku: Perhaps there is some good in you yet, N. Gin. If you promise to change your ways and go back to your old desk job at the stapler factory, then all is forgiven.”
  18. ^ Naughty Dog. Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back. Sony Computer Entertainment America. PlayStation. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: But Doctor Cortex, to reach full power, we need not only your Master Crystal, but also there are as many as 25 Slave Crystals on the surface. How do you expect to retrieve them when we don't have any earthbound operatives left?”
  19. ^ Naughty Dog. Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back. Sony Computer Entertainment America. PlayStation. (in English). “Doctor Neo Cortex: Yes!! My plan is nearly complete, and I have you, Crash Bandicoot, to thank for. (His signal starts to break up.) N. Gin! What's happening? She's stealing our signal?! [...] N. Gin, you fool! She's telling him everything!”
  20. ^ Traveller's Tales. Crash Bandicoot: The Wratch of Cortex. Sony Computer Entertainment America. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor Nefarious Tropy: There must be something we can come up with! Say, Doctor. Haven't you been tinkering with some kind of new secret weapon in your laboratory? / Doctor Neo Cortex: I don't know what you're talking about, N. Tropy! / Doctor N. Gin: Doctor Cortex! I think he's referring to the super-secret weapon you've been laboring over day and night since the last time Crash defeated you!”
  21. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash of the Titans. Sierra Entertainment. Wii. (in English). “Uka Uka: Cortex, I'm going to replace you. (Shocked, Neo Cortex spits his tea all over N. Gin's face.) / Doctor N. Gin: (screams) Thank you, master! / Doctor Neo Cortex: You can't replace me. My name's on the stationery! / Doctor N. Gin: (giggles) That's right, tough guy! Unless you want to buy a new stationery, you respect the master!! / Tiny Tiger: It's really nice stationery, too. / Doctor N. Gin: Oh, I know! Glossy!”
  22. ^ Radical Entertainment. Crash of the Titans. Sierra Entertainment. Wii. (in English). “Aku Aku: Well, what do we have here? You'll tell us where Coco is, won't you? / Doctor N. Gin: Of course not. Disgusting, filthy bandicoots! I hate them with cheese. / "Neo" N. Gin: They made it here! Now they'll help us save Doctor Cortex! / "Nina" N. Gin: Don't be ridiculous, you stupid hominid!! We're with Nina now! We're with the winner. / "Neo" N. Gin: But Doctor Cortex is our friend! / "Nina" N. Gin: You don't have any friends!! He always kicked you in the tokus, and other... very... gentle spots!! / "Neo" N. Gin: But I liked it when he did that! (Crash and Aku Aku look on confusedly) / "Nina" N. Gin: It was kind of fun. Listen. We make a deal with this filthy rodent and pie-nuts-face, and they help us save the master... then we shower them with doom! / "Neo" N. Gin: (giggling) Yes! We shower them good! Right in the eyes! (N. Gin giggles some more until Crash yanks as his head rocket, causing him to yelp in pain.)
  23. ^ Vicarious Visions. Crash Nitro Kart. Sony Computer Entertainment America. PlayStation 2. (in English). “Doctor N. Gin: Cybernetic sharks? We should try that! Yes, yes, they would make... great henchmen! / Doctor Neo Cortex: But this one lost. / (N. Gin and Cortex see Tiny picking a large ball of lint out of his belly button, sniffing it, and eating it.) / Doctor N. Gin: It appears to me he'd fit right in!”

Naughty Dog is an American video game company founded by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin in 1986. ... Naughty Dog is an American video game company founded by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin in 1986. ... Travellers Tales Ltd is a British software house established in 1990 and based in Knutsford, Cheshire. ... Vicarious Visions is a video game developer. ... Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era in the 21st century. ... is the 84th day of the year (85th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era in the 21st century. ... is the 84th day of the year (85th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era in the 21st century. ... is the 84th day of the year (85th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... Year 2007 (MMVII) is the current year, a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and the AD/CE era in the 21st century. ... is the 148th day of the year (149th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Doctor N. Gin
  • Crash Mania's Crash-O-Pedia article on Doctor N. Gin


 
 

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