American Dad Vs. Family Guy

American Dad Vs. Family Guy




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American Dad Vs. Family Guy

American Dad vs. Family Guy Kung Fu 2


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American Dad vs. Family Guy Kung Fu 2




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Unfortunately American Dad vs. Family Guy Kung Fu 2 is not available on your device. Please try one of the related games instead or visit our HTML5 category .
This Flash game is loaded using the Ruffle emulator. If you notice any glitches(such as the game getting stuck or music/sound missing), click here to Play in NuMuKi Browser instead for the best experience.
Play the American Dad vs. Family Guy Kung Fu 2 game if you are looking for something to lift your spirits and calm your nerves! Are you a fan of famous comedy cartoon series? Then you shouldn't miss this one! Putting together two of the most well known and hilarious families, this game guarantees you'll laugh so hard until your belly hurts! 
Isn't it cool that you have the chance to play the part of any character you like from the American Dad and Family Guy Series? Besides, you can also pick any opponent from the adverse side. Can you take them down using your skills and special moves? You will need to max out their treat filter to do so. Many hilarious brawls will ensue!
The first step of your hilarious combat is to pick a character from one of the two teams. Do you like the strange cast of American Dad? Roger, Francine, Hayley, and Stan are just some of the options you have. However, if you are a bigger fan of Family Guy, you can go for Stewie, Peter, Lois, Meg, and even Brian! 
Do you know how to fight? It's easier than it looks! Use the Left and Right Arrow Keys to move. You can jump by pressing the Up Arrow, and block by using the Down Arrow. Now, it's time to attack! When it comes to leg work, you need to use A for a light kick, and W for a heavy kick. Are you ready to start punching? Press S for a light attack, and D for something more powerful. 
Once you decide on your protagonist, it's time to take a look at their special moves. I think this is one of the most impressive features of the game. Take a few seconds to memorize the key combinations to ensure success in the upcoming combat!
For example, you can perform cool moves such as Roundhouse Kick and Sword Strike using Lois. Play Stan if you want to throw a grenade and even use a handgun!
Another important aspect of the game is the fact that you can enjoy it with your mates. That's a sure-fire way to have a blast and lighten the mood in any gathering! All you need to do is select the 2 Player Mode.
The controls are incredibly ingenious, allowing both players to effectively share a keyboard. Take a look at the instructions in the main menu to get used to the gameplay when you are joined by a friend. It might seem complicated at first, but I'm sure you'll figure it out in no time!
Are you ready for a series of battles where the funniest one wins? You will need to win two fights out of three to become the champion! Don't forget to be on the lookout for the hilarious finishing scenes! Have you ever seen something more ridiculous?
If you enjoy playing American Dad vs. Family Guy Kung Fu 2, you might be excited to find out that there are 87 more Fighting games you can try! The most popular is Super Smash Flash 2 , and the most recently added is Jingle Brawl
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Because Seth MacFarlane created both Family Guy and American Dad, it’s practically impossible for people not to compare the two shows.
Because Seth MacFarlane created both Family Guy and American Dad , it’s practically impossible for people not to compare the two shows. He also plays a significant main role in both shows — the eponymous character in both cases: Peter Griffin, the titular family guy of Family Guy, and Stan Smith, the titular American dad of American Dad.
The animation style is essentially exactly the same, and the titles indicate that the shows are even similar in premise. However, in many ways, American Dad is significantly better than Family Guy. In fact, Family Guy ’s poor reputation has only served to push people away from American Dad when it is arguably one of the best animated shows on television right now, if not one of the best shows on television right now.
Each of the jokes on American Dad is constructed with tact and elegance that is rarely found on television. While Family Guy tends to go for the obvious joke, and often the crudest one, American Dad is much the opposite . Episodes like “The Hand That Rocks The Rogu” have intelligent jokes with practically perfect execution.
After Billy snaps the curly fry he and Snot had been holding, he time-travels backwards and says he lost his flip-flops over the Indian Ocean. Snot says, “Not the red Havaianas,” which sees Billy looking down with grief; Snot replies, then, “It was the red Havaianas.” So many jokes in American Dad are perfectly constructed and delivered, just like this one.
Unlike the Griffin family members on Family Guy, the main characters of American Dad, the Smith family, actually like one another. They even grow to like one another more and more over the course of the show.
On the flip side, the Griffin family members actively seem to either hate each other or lust after each other, all of which ends up being incredibly messy and weak character-wise. The Smith family members not only actually like each other, but they work well together and improve together over the course of the show.
One of Family Guy ’s biggest problems is playing into hurtful “humor” and relatively unfunny and malicious jokes towards one another. The way that characters like Lois and Meg are treated is painfully indicative more of prejudice towards women than actual good writing or humorous jokes.
In fact, the way that Family Guy treats its female characters, queer characters, and other minority characters is so unnecessarily brutal. A generation of men started speaking to women like characters on Family Guy speak to Meg as if it was okay and funny, when it was only ever the opposite. American Dad, in fact, is also the opposite — it treats its characters with immense respect, and is always very tactful when handling more sensitive subjects.
While Family Guy is often cruel and derogatory in its “humor” regarding minorities, frequently punching down, American Dad almost always does the opposite. The jokes made on American Dad are always made with respect and tact. When they have to deal with sensitive subjects, like queer characters or female characters, they’re actually treated with respect.
Francine and Hayley are not treated poorly because they’re women, and the other characters in the show and in their family actually like them. There are gay characters, trans characters, disabled characters, characters of color, and other minorities that are treated with significantly more tact in a single episode of American Dad than in the entirety of Family Guy.
While Family Guy tried to spin off into The Cleveland Show, neither show was relatively successful with its ensemble cast or its supporting characters. That show doesn’t properly utilize many of its supporting characters, nor are they particularly well-developed.
However, the supporting cast of American Dad is absolutely spectacular. Not only are long-standing favorites like Tuttle, Deputy Director Bullock, and Principal Lewis well-used, but even newer supporting characters like Rogu and Billy are arguably even better.
Over the years, episodes of Family Guy have stopped showing significant originality or experimental concepts. Every episode is pretty much the same as one that already exists with little variation, and the show very rarely takes chances with its plots. However, American Dad is on the opposite end of the spectrum, and attempts as many experimental niche episode concepts as it possibly can.
Not only that, but American Dad pulls off many of these concepts. Episodes like “Rabbit Ears,” “Lost in Space,” and “Cheek to Cheek: A Stripper’s Story” are some truly phenomenal episodes of television, and nothing Family Guy has produced will ever come close to touching them.
Seth MacFarlane may have created both Family Guy and American Dad, and they may look visually similar, but they couldn’t be more different, in many ways. Over the years, Family Guy has come to represent the absolute worst of Seth MacFarlane. The show grabs for the lowest-hanging fruit, the crudest jokes, and the least kind thing it could possibly say.
However, American Dad strives to be intelligent, tactful, and hilarious with every joke. Not only that, but the characters grow and develop, the plots are increasingly well-written, and the show is honestly just all-around better. It represents the absolute best of what Seth MacFarlane is capable of creating, in the end.
American Dad has been on the air since 2005, and has only just begun its sixteenth season. For many shows, running into the sixteenth season would be an indicator that the show is inevitably getting worse, but American Dad is one of those rare shows that has actually gotten better and better over the years.
By comparison, Family Guy has been on the air since 1999 (barring cancellation time), and is currently wrapping up its nineteenth season. Over the years, Family Guy has only gotten worse.
The voice cast on Family Guy is a pretty good voice cast, and arguably one of the best parts of the show. Unfortunately for Family Guy, the voice cast for American Dad is probably one of the best on television . The main cast features Seth MacFarlane as both Stan and Roger, both of which he nails; Wendy Schaal as Francine, who gets better with every episode; and Scott Grimes as Steve, who both is hilarious and has a beautiful voice.
There is also Rachael MacFarlane as Hayley, who can pull off some of the best effects ever; Jeff Fischer as Jeff, who is one of the best additions to the cast ever; and Dee Bradley Baker as Klaus, which is one of many voices Dee Bradley Baker does that prove he’s one of the best voice actors in the industry.
Early on in its run, Family Guy was actually cancelled. Fans were distraught and fought hard enough that the show was actually revived and brought back. However, it was arguably worse when it came back, and it has only gotten worse since then. On the flip side, American Dad moved networks from Fox to TBS partway through its run, and only improved after that move happened.
American Dad was already great, but it became truly incredible after that moment and has only gotten better since. The opposite, unfortunately, is true for Family Guy, proving once and for all that American Dad is better than Family Guy.
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By


Jason Wiese


published 22 February 20

Seth MacFarlane has made a name for himself as one of the dominant forces in comedy, with his latest series, The Orville , becoming one of the most successful hybrids of science fiction with sitcom tropes in recent memory. However, before taking off with live action affairs, what made him a TV icon was his work in animation , most notably Family Guy and American Dad!
Both co-created by and starring Seth MacFarlane in multiple roles, Family Guy and American Dad! are two of the most enduringly popular cartoons made for mature audiences of all time (having lasted a combined 615 episodes), both of which borrow from traditional sitcom themes, but with their own brand of absurdity and dark humor that has infamously sparked controversy. Of course, these series are not mere copies of each other (despite bearing a few similarities to other particular adult-oriented animated shows ) and are easily distinguishable. The real question is which of MacFarlane’s longest-running series is the superior creation?
It is a debate that has lasted longer and enraged more people than it probably needed to in the first, so we are going to attempt put it to bed once and for all. This is my personal take on which of Seth MacFarlane’s best is truly his best: American Dad! or Family Guy , divided into 5 different categories of criteria.
Probably the biggest similarity between the series is the family dynamic . Both the Griffins on Family Guy and the Smiths on American Dad! are made up of your idiot dads (everyman Peter Griffin and CIA operative Stan Smith, both voiced by Seth MacFarlane), your smarter and (especially in the Griffins’ case) more attractive moms (Alex Borstein’s Lois Griffin and Wendy Schaal’s Francine Smith), irreverent children, and talking non-human family members.
The biggest difference between the two families are the two latter mentioned elements: the children and talking non-humans. While on Family Guy , Meg (Mila Kinus) is the Griffins’ black sheep, Chris (Seth Green) is only slightly smarter and slimmer than his father, and Stewie (Seth MacFarlane with a British accent ), is an infant of genius intelligence hellbent on world domination, liberal teen Hayley Smith (Seth’s sister, Rachael MacFarlane) never cowers from standing up for herself and her brother Steve (Scott Grimes) is an average high schooler who wants to prove he is more than a dork. Furthermore, the Griffins’ alcoholic dog, Brian (MacFarlane, essentially, as himself) serves as the voice of reason, while the Smiths’ German-accented goldfish, Klaus (Dee Bradley Baker), and extraterrestrial live-in guest Roger (MacFarlane) also have their vices and voice of reason in less helpful ways.
American Dad! has a leg over Family Guy in how it offers more relatable characters whose cliched personas are rarely resorted to the butt of the joke, but I kind of love the caricatures that the Griffins are defined by and how the show often tries to juxtapose those tropes, such as with Stewie and Brian’s mismatched team-ups. American Dad! may also have the star power of Patrick Stewart as Stan’s boss, but I still have give the point to Family Guy for a more colorful and extensive full ensemble .
As for the biggest difference between Seth MacFarlane’s animated hits, it is clearly how the comedy is structured. While American Dad! borrows more from the styles of a traditional sitcom, Family Guy is its own brand entirely, going a step above self-referential humor to (for the sake of giving it a name) multi-referential humor . While its own common tropes, themes, and even behind-the-scenes activity have become the source of many jokes nowadays, the series was best defined in its early stages, and still is, by its signature cutaways, pop culture riffs , and goofy sight gags you might find in a Zucker Brothers movie (they co-directed Airplane! with Jim Abraham).
American Dad! , on the other hand, does not utilize this same irreverent style, but instead relies more on a straightforward narrative structure and, sometimes, it will even attempt a more believable explanation for its bizarre material. For instance, Family Guy often plays with elements of fantasy, has people spontaneously spring into song, and there is not explanation for how both Stewie and Brian can talk, but Dad! at least explains that Stan stole Roger from Area 51 and Klaus is actually a goldfish with a German man’s brain, as the result of a CIA experiment gone wrong.
While I have a personal soft spot for Family Guy ’s cutaways, I will admit that the concept can feel tired after a while and many of those pop culture references run the risk of sounding too dated and too niche. American Dad! actually gives itself the advantage by sticking to tradition and, in what may be a supposed upset to some, gets the point for humorous style.
Family Guy and American Dad! differing styles of humor, but the tone is very much in the same. From clever political satire to random moments of obscenity, two series, in typical Seth MacFarlane fashion, love to push the envelope as immaturely as possible.
What keeps people coming back, however, are the shows’ recurring gags, which Family Guy is chock full of, such as whenever a character falls and has to hold their knee while breathing heavily for a full minute or two, Bonnie’s (Jennifer Tilly) long overdue pregnancy, anytime the Griffins’ understanding of Stewie is put into question, and (probably the best one there is) Peter’s epic fights with The Chicken. American Dad! is relatively lacking in recurring jokes, however, unless you count the rotation of newspaper headlines and Roger’s disguises in the opening credits.
The winner of this category, like the last one, would normally depend on one’s comedic tastes. However, since the tone between the two is not that different, I think I will give it to Family Guy purely based on the series’ commitment to making recurring gags a trend that, even when it grows tiresome, is made funny again by a meta commentary on that fact.
Name any Seth MacFarlane show and it is sure to have an interesting ratings history behind it . Or, more accurately, MacFarlane’s relationship with the Fox network has had its ups and downs and Family Guy is the prime example.
Despite maintaining a steady average of 7.2 million viewers per week , Fox famously cancelled Family Guy twice citing unimpressive returns both times, but would revive it after the DVDs proved successful. American Dad! managed a greater average than Family Guy (well, by 0.1 points ), but Fox gave them the
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