TurboTime was an 8-bit racing game inside Litwak's Arcade, featured in Disney's 2012 animated feature film Wreck-It Ralph. It starred the character Turbo, and was his original home before taking over Sugar Rush, and becoming King Candy.
Background[]
TurboTime was around when the arcade first opened, and was the most popular game in the establishment. Turbo, himself, enjoyed the attention he received from gamers.
When Mr. Litwak installed a new racing game, RoadBlasters, it stole Turbo's "thunder", causing him to become extremely jealous and wishing to gain back the attention he once joyfully received.
As a result, Turbo left his game and tried to take over RoadBlasters, appearing on the screen while some of the arcade visitors were playing. He crashed into the car the players were controlling, making the game crash. Instead of getting Turbo his attention and glory back as intended, this action caused both machines to be considered "out of order" and unplugged for good, after that, both of the consoles likely either got recycled or scrapped after their removal from the arcade. Turbo, meanwhile, was presumed to have died alongside the consoles.
Since then, the characters of the arcade usually refer to a character game jumping during arcade hours as "going Turbo", and is something to be avoided. However, near the end of the film, it's revealed that Turbo had survived his game being unplugged, and had, assumed a new identity as King Candy, taken over Sugar Rush, another racing game. Turbo is eventually destroyed by Ralph and Vanellope which truly destroys the last remains of TurboTime for good.
Trivia[]
- Like the other games created for the film, a TurboTime game was produced for the Wreck-It Ralph app.
- TurboTime was placed next to Fix-It Felix Jr., which explains the fact that of all the characters in the film, Felix was the only one who knows who Turbo really is and what the phrase "Going Turbo" actually meant and why King Candy was the only one who recognized Ralph in Sugar Rush.
- Turbo most likely "went Turbo" in 1987, since that was the year RoadBlasters was first released in arcades.
- It's never explained what happened to the other characters from this game (including the "Turbo Twins", Turbo's rivals) after the game was unplugged, they were either rendered homeless like Q*bert and stranded in Game Central Station, or that they were all killed when they all couldn't evacuate their game in time. Since we never see them in Game Central Station, they were all most likely killed.
- TurboTime is supposed to be a parody of Rally-X, but is portrayed as a racing game instead of a maze game (it has a steering wheel instead of a joystick, and its gameplay, showing an oval racetrack from above, only appears for a split-second) and also seems like a combination of Pole Position and Death Race.