Plays nintendo games


















Please DLC boards Nintendo! Having much enjoyed two of the previous entries in this series, it should come as little surprise that this latest is very good also. A hybrid to keep an eye out for. Find out soon with my better late than never review. Plus, I think kids would enjoy this one. Cozy Grove Switch — This game has been on my list for quite some time and I finally got the chance to play it.

Plus, there are multiple stories as you help the spirits of the island find peace in the afterlife. Check your jumping prowess before taking this one on! A Year of Springs Nintendo Switch — this visual novel took me by surprise — in a good way.

I love Finding Cats! Will the adventurers be able to make it back to the submarine safely?! Everyone is drawing a picture together There is a fake artist hiding among the real artists - can you find out who it is? However, don't let the fake artist figure out what they are supposed to be drawing. Try not to be suspected as the fake artist, but also be careful not to make it too easy for the fake artist to figure out the drawing!

You are one of the investors who saw their potential. Invest like crazy and make some money! Only one investor can earn a profit from each company. You must try to read the movements your rivals while using your capital and three cards if you hope to become the biggest shareholder! Not only do you have to be lucky in this game, but you must also analyze your rivals while thinking about your own moves!

You and your fellow astronauts are desperately trying to recover the scattered supplies, all while your oxygen levels are falling. Of course you do. You're a reasonable adult with great taste. In that case you have to try Eastward, a new top-down game in the vein of every bit RPG you ever loved.

It's slow-paced and takes a while to get going, but it's well worth the investment. That's called damning with faint praise, but the competition is stiff. Skyward Sword may feel old-fashioned in the wake of the paradigm-shifting Breath of the Wild, but it's a fond look back at a different type of Zelda, complete with a number of upgrades that make it more palatable for a modern audience.

The traditional words used to describe Dead Cells are "rogue-like" and "metroidvania. But in Dead Cells you get to keep your upgrades and then restart with those upgrades, meaning you slowly progress through the game more easily as you play.

Very cool. So if you need a game like that, jump on in. We've been waiting literally decades for a new Pokemon Snap. Thankfully this one lives up to the hype.

Celeste is a video game that makes you want to lodge your controller in your TV -- in a good way. Featuring incredible level design and flawlessly tuned precision platforming, Celeste is one of the best games of its type ever released. It's smart, charming and dense with content. It's also perfect for the Nintendo Switch. You'll be hurling obscenities at this game on public transport, and you'll love every second of it. A very good turn-based strategy game by the creators of Faster Than Light.

An intricate, intelligent creation that demands problem solving from the player in interesting ways. And not just any goose, a horrible goose.

An asshole goose that makes life extremely difficult for everyone around it. Untitled Goose Game has absolutely taken the world by storm. Even Chrissie Teigen got obsessed with it. But is it good? Very good. This one should absolutely be on any and all Nintendo Switch consoles. Stardew Valley is the perfect example of why the Nintendo Switch is a game-changing device.

Because of the nature of the Switch and how it allows you to just passively play while watching TV, or on public transport it's perfect for a game like Stardew Valley -- which is the digital equivalent of knitting a scarf.

It's a genuine, proper masterpiece. An investigation story, essentially -- you arrive on the Obra Dinn, a ship where almost all the crewmates have died. Via flashbacks you try to piece together the story of what happened.

It's strange, innovative and completely unforgettable. If you've played a Paper Mario game before, you probably know the drill. The series is set in a 2D "paper" version of Mario, a theme used to create all sorts of hyper-stylized mechanics and slick visual elements.

It's all laced up with a self-awareness and charm that make the series irresistible to Nintendo fans. Don't believe the online hype: This is one of the best games in the series so far. It's also great to see Pokemon being available on Nintendo's premium console. Definitely check it out. Super Mario Maker 2 doesn't quite feel made for the Nintendo Switch in the way it was perfect for the Wii U, but it's still a fantastic piece of software.

It makes level design accessible for everyone and has a massively beefed-up single-player mode. That's not to mention the endless replay value that comes with the insane user-created levels. Check Super Mario Maker 2 out for sure. It speaks to the quality of the game that people got excited when it was ported to the Nintendo Switch nine years later. But it's also testament to the power of the Nintendo Switch as a device. It's simply a super fun and convenient way to play video games, particularly indie games like Fez, which are well suited to the smaller screen.

And if you haven't played Fez, you absolutely should. It's a genius, mind-bending thing that playfully messes with video game tropes. One of the best games of the last decade. Splatoon 2 is very similar to the first Splatoon. It's barely a sequel in the traditional sense, but, much like Mario Kart 8, that doesn't make it any less essential.

Splatoon's high concept is pure genius and extremely Nintendo. It takes the first-person shooter, traditionally a violent genre, and flips it on its head. You're shooting paint, not bullets. You don't score points for shooting enemies, you score points by shooting the environment itself. Among Us is one of the most popular games in the world right now.

While the Nintendo Switch might not be the ideal platform, I'd argue it's the best way for kids to play. There's no chance of them coming across audio chats with teenagers swearing at one another, plus the chat is censored.

I can't believe it even exists. I also can't believe how good it is. It doesn't even make sense. Then it was released, and it turned out to be one of the best games on the Nintendo Switch. Except you battle killer rabbits with laser guns. It's overpriced, but if you love Zelda, and you loved Link's Awakening , you have to play this faithful, lovingly adapted remake. It's not perfect, but it gets the job done. Cadence of Hyrule is an indie rogue-like rhythm game based on the Legend of Zelda.

In regular speak: a game that crosses Zelda with Dance Dance Revolution. Which sounds like a completely bizarre proposition, but Cadence of Hyrule works! It really works. And you should play the hell out of it. Doom rules. This is known.



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