![]() ![]() I’m hooked all over again, and so are my boys. ![]() It’s not going to change your mind on the console, but if you never owned a Wii U then you can now buy the definitive version of the best Mario Kart since the original SNES one. This is a brilliant game that runs so well on a new console, and it’s one that you will be so glad to have on Switch – the ability to just play it anywhere, anytime should not be understated for a game like this, because it’s perfect pick up and play material. It’s difficult to really say more than that without ending up sounding like a fawning idiot. Part of the fun is unlocking things, but here you’re just unlocking Kart customisations via coins. This is a bit of a double edged sword, because for new players it’s great, but for those of us returning there’s an ever so slight lack of direction. Everything is unlocked from the start, too, meaning Mirror Mode and 200CC are there along with all the tracks to try them on. Because of this, there will be some sections where you can grab two at a time, though it’s fairly easy to slide round a corner and grab two anyway. Smaller changes like adding a third slide-boost add tactics to all modes, but there’s no question that Battle Mode is back, and the most attention has been lavished upon it.Įlsewhere, then, the biggest change is the fact you can have two power-ups at a time. The modes are fun, and yes, Nintendo has made Battle Mode an actual fun thing to do again, online or offline. The arenas are smartly laid out with special mention to the Splatoon themed one (Urchin Underpass) and the SNES Battle Course, which still gives me goosebumps. Bursting your opponent’s balloons nets you points, and if you lose all of yours you are reset with less balloons and a point deduction to match. Bob-omb Blast switches every power-up out for a bomb and you can collect multiple bombs to throw at people. It’s agonising to knock the current Shine Thief off course only for someone else to swoop in and steal it, but I guess that’s the thief part in action. Rush to the Shine, grab it by running into it, then evade for as long as possible, trying to succeed by holding it the longest. Once captured, the runaways can drive over a switch that frees the captured teammates, and it all just plays out in a wonderful, chaotic experience that is both moreish and fun. How does that work, you ask? Well, the cops have piranha plants that attack everything nearby, while the “renegades” have to evade capture for a set time limit. What we do have, though, is a completely new Battle Mode which adds some ways to play that may, in time, become the star of the party.Īs ever, simplicity is key, and Renegade Roundup pits two teams against one another: one are cops, the other are robbers. As you jump and trick in the air, they’ll turn into squid quickly, and it’s just lovely.Īside from all the Wii U DLC being included, there isn’t an awful lot new that most will notice on the surface: there’s two new weapons (boo will steal weapons, the feather lets you jump and, thus, avoid attacks), and look, I think most people who adored MK8 would kill for some new tracks, but that wasn’t to be. They’re close enough to all-rounders, and I’ve always liked the smaller, lighter characters anyway. The new characters fit right in (naturally), but as a big lover of Splatoon, the Inklings are my new favourite. Let’s face it, Mario Kart is just a true good in this world, and Christ we could all use that right now.įrom the meticulously designed tracks to the tiny touches that brought us the infamous Luigi stare. The slight frame hitching from the original is gone (though it does look ever so slightly framey in 3-player and up at times), and whether you’re in TV mode or Handheld mode, it sings with glorious colour and brightness. While MK8 looked gorgeous on Wii U, it somehow looks better on Switch. Mario Kart 8 was phenomenal, you know that we know that the cat knows that, and while there will be those that find the Switch “deluxe” version to be just a Switch version, I can’t get behind the negativity, because of all the games I’ve played this year, it did the impossible: it got my kids back into Nintendo. There’s a temptation for me to just throw a pasted list of new features, then in the largest font the site will allow just put “this game is amazing, bye” and run away to start playing it again. ![]()
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