![]() ![]() ![]() There’s an eight year gap between Ultra and R but they’re both rather similar. On the PS3, I had a heck of a lot of fun playing Bomberman Ultra with friends. It’s a case of not fixing it because it isn’t broken. I was pleased to know, despite dusting off the name and sprucing it up, that this Bomberman hasn’t changed much at all and R tosses to the wayside some of the cluttering frills that the series has picked up over the years. It’s a good thing then that this core gameplay is as fun as it is, as it’s always been, because that’s just what we expect from a Bomberman game. This alone keeps it from being a total bomb but if you’ve tired of the limited Bomberman play-style before, chances are you’ll have a short fuse for facelifted Bomberman R, as undoubtedly as you’re growing tired of these bomb puns (sorry). The anime-esque presentation, hit and miss voice acting, and baffling 3D environs may detract from the experience for some but fans of the series will immediately feel at home with gameplay that’s remained essentially unchanged. What this? A second Nintendo Switch review in a single week? A game developed by Konami in 2017? And it’s a Bomberman game, the likes of which we haven’t seen in seven years? Believe it.īut is this Nintendo Switch exclusive, developed by both Konami and HexaDrive in the stead of a dissolved Hudson Soft, real dynamite or merely a blast from the past? Beneath the bombastic explosiveness of Bomberman R, underlying its sugary, energetic loudness, there’s a core aspect of the game series which remains intact and as fun for couch co-op as ever. I love the smell of napalm in the morning.” Nothing else in the world smells like that. ![]()
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