Hmmmm, need to try tbr myself and give it a db page.
As well as the above suggestions, I have always liked the esp pinball games for just causing havoc, especially old man stanley's house and the wild west table.
I also quite enjoy crime hunter's endless mode for just plane slaughter, though I think psycho strike beats it for shear havoc causing, at least until your enemies get enough weapons to not be quite so helpless .
One game I'd love to see replicated in audio is an old arcade classic called rampage which we used to play on the comadore Amiga computer.
this was a side scroller, or at least a game with a scrolling view although it was in an enclosed level, where you played as three fairly huge monsters, a giant gorilla, a godzilla type lizard or a huge wolf creature.
You could walk left to write and climb up and down buildings, as well as in any direction, and you had to complete each level by smashing all buildings climbing up the sides of them and punching in the walls.
occasionally, you'd find different things in the buildings, like pot plants which you could eat to get health, or pots of chill which would let you blow a fireball, and of course lots of tasty little humans to munch .
The enemies were police helecopters that would try to shoot at you, but which could be punched out of the air, and cars which tried to ram you when you were on the ground, though you could jump up and down and squish them, or even punch them into the air to let those tasty humans fall out.
Though your goal was trashing all the city buildings, there were lots of other things to smash too, from lamp posts, and fire hydrents to bridges, indeed a favourite tactic of mine was jumping on a bridge until it crumbled then laughing as all the cars on it went into the drink .
It was hilarious, and since it was entirely a side scroller, though with up and down climbing for the buildings, would be absolutely doable in audio.
With our dreaming and singing, Ceaseless and sorrowless we! The glory about us clinging Of the glorious futures we see,
Our souls with high music ringing; O men! It must ever be
That we dwell in our dreaming and singing, A little apart from ye. (Arthur O'Shaughnessy 1873.)