Jump to content

Kino reference/easter egg in MW3...


Recommended Posts

Well, it is possible this could be a big "coincidence" but c'mon people, its the same series (yes different developers but lets think outside the whole "they do that game and they do this game" box, they do communicate.) and i have seen a couple more MW3 zombie reference easter eggs ill be posting shortly but this is the coolest/most direct one i have found thus far...

Kino = Kino Der Toten

Berlin = Kino Der Toten Location

Kino + Berlin = Kino Reference/Easter Egg

PS: Can be found during mission "Scorched Earth"

Link to comment
  • Replies 10
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

coincidence i think

they are just German words in a German location. Kino = cinema/theater verrruckt= asylum/sanitorium

but think, only about 11 months til new zombies

.....hopefully...... lol

:P

Well Verruckt and Kino Der Toten are BOTH located in Berlin. :lol:

Oh and like Black Ops, we were not sure if zombies were gonna continue. But it did. So I don't see why Treyarch wouldn't stop zombies. I mean... moon was the last zombie map of Black Ops. When they said that, did they mean they were gonna make zombies on their next Call of Duty (Operation Charybdis? http://callofduty.wikia.com/wiki/Operation:_Charybdis)? We'll have to see... that is if they reuse GKNOVA6.

And with all these references to zombies, somethin tells me theres gonna be an add on for it on Survival. :lol:

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

These are not Kino easter eggs. Berlin is a place in Germany. Kino and verruckt are german words. Just a coincidence.

they are just German words in a German location. Kino = cinema/theater verrruckt= asylum/sanitorium

Agree on the Kino thing. Location placed in Berlin, in Berlin are cinemas, so it says Kino Berlin. Probably coincidence.

But:

Verrückt means crazy, not sanatorium. There is no point in naming one of the train stations "Verruckt", other than doing a zombie reference:

All other stations are named in English, they are either just fun like "no ammo road", "You are here", or IW/MW refrences like "Juggernaut St".

And then, there is this one random german word "verruckt". If it is just a german word, why don't they pick one of the other, don't know, one of the other 1.000.000 german words there are? Why should they do a single station that is actually not funny? Why wouldn't they call it Sanatorium then? There is no other point in naming a station "Verruckt" than doing a zombie reference. 100%.

Link to comment

These are not Kino easter eggs. Berlin is a place in Germany. Kino and verruckt are german words. Just a coincidence.

they are just German words in a German location. Kino = cinema/theater verrruckt= asylum/sanitorium

Agree on the Kino thing. Location placed in Berlin, in Berlin are cinemas, so it says Kino Berlin. Probably coincidence.

But:

Verrückt means crazy, not sanatorium. There is no point in naming one of the train stations "Verruckt", other than doing a zombie reference:

All other stations are named in English, they are either just fun like "no ammo road", "You are here", or IW/MW refrences like "Juggernaut St".

And then, there is this one random german word "verruckt". If it is just a german word, why don't they pick one of the other, don't know, one of the other 1.000.000 german words there are? Why should they do a single station that is actually not funny? Why wouldn't they call it Sanatorium then? There is no other point in naming a station "Verruckt" than doing a zombie reference. 100%.

well said

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, Code of Conduct, We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue. .