Wee-views: New Star Manager, Omega Strike, Pang Adventures, Clouds & Sheep 2, Super Hero Fight Club Reloaded, Feudal Alloy, Forever Forest

Welcome to another helping of wee-views! These are ‘wee reviews’ of games that I didn’t get round to completing, but did play enough to have formed a fairly solid opinion.

Please do bear in mind, then, that each of these games could end up getting better or worse as you progress further in them. For a more detailed explanation of the thought process behind wee-views, check out the original wee-view page.


New Star Manager

New Star Games / Five Aces Publishing
Switch, PC, iOS, Android (Switch version reviewed)

How much I’ve played – Got promoted from Scottish League Two, finished mid-table in Scottish League One

A number of years ago I was hopelessly addicted to New Star Soccer, a mobile game in which you played as a young up-and-coming footballer.

New Star Manager is its follow-up, and having previously been released on mobiles as New Star Soccer Manager it’s now made a high-profile transfer to the Switch, ditching its controversial microtransactions along the way (as well as the word ‘Soccer’ from its title for some reason). And it’s just as bloody addictive as its predecessor was.

This time, as the name suggests, you aren’t in charge of a single player but the manager of an entire team.

As well as buying and selling players, figuring out formations and assigning team tactics, you also need to keep players happy, take part in press conferences and upgrade your team’s facilities (from the training ground and scouting system to the actual stadium itself).

Best of all, though, is the actual match process itself. At first glance it’s similar to Football Manager, with text commentary appearing as the game progresses at high speed. When it comes to highlights though, things change.

When there’s an important moment, Football Manager cuts to a view of the pitch so you can see it playing out in front of you. New Star Manager goes one better by letting you actually take control of these moments.

Here you can pass to players’ feet, pass to space instead, create player runs or just go off on a dribble if you feel like it, all with the hopeful aim of getting a shot on goal.

It’s essentially a player-manager game, then, and it’s extremely moreish, but that’s not to say it isn’t without its setbacks. Every player name in the game is completely fictional – so you can’t go wandering into the transfer marked armed with a list of real-life players you want to sign – and you have to start off as a brand new team in the bottom division of the country you choose (meaning I couldn’t manage Celtic).

It was also originally designed with touch screens in mind, and while you can use the Switch’s touchscreen in handheld mode, if you’re using the JoyCon or Pro Controller it can take a wee while to get used to the button-based interface. You do get it eventually, though.

That aside, this is exactly the sort of game that’s going to have me losing a lot of sleep in the future, because I haven’t played anything with such a strong “one more game” feeling in a while and I’m already obsessed with it. So yeah, thanks a lot, New Star Manager.


Omega Strike

Woblyware / Digerati Distribution
Switch, Xbox One, PS4, PC (Switch version reviewed)

How much I’ve played – Unlocked all three characters, put about 5-6 hours in

We’re now at the stage that you can’t turn around without bumping your head into a Metroidvania game: it’s fair to say the genre is becoming massively oversaturated.

I can safely say that of all the indie Metroidvanias I’ve played in the last five years, Omega Strike is definitely one of them.

Its gimmick is that you can switch between three characters (eventually, once you rescue the other two). One of them can push blocks, one of them can roll Morph Ball style through tunnels, and one has a double-jump.

Cue your usual Metroidvania routine where certain areas can only be accessed once you’ve got the right character, or their specific upgrades.

Nothing about Omega Strike offended me in any way: it looks nice enough in a Metal Slug sort of way, its music is pleasant enough and there’s nothing about the way it plays that feels particularly broken or clunky.

Its checkpointing system is generous enough, its boss fights aren’t cheap and it’s just a half-decent game all round. But it just doesn’t have that spark that makes it stand out among the countless other Metroidvanias that also perform adequately.

When a game like this doesn’t have its own unique character design, setting or sense of humour it’s hard to recommend with any enthusiasm beyond saying: “it’s fine, it works, it’s fun enough, it meets a need.”

So, if you can afford Omega Strike and you like this sort of thing, then you might as well get it because it’s fine, it works, it’s fun enough and it meets a need.


Pang Adventures

DotEmu / Pastagames 
Switch, Xbox One, PS4, PC (Switch version reviewed)

How much I’ve played – cleared the first four worlds in Tour Mode

The original Pang, also known as Buster Bros, was released way back in 1989. Since then there have been a bunch of sequels and remakes, most of which have just been alright.

It’s also worth bearing in mind that the DS one was called Pang: Magical Michael, which is maybe the worst game name ever.

Regardless, Pang Adventures is the latest edition. It first came to the PS4, Xbox One and PC a few years back, and now it’s made the trip to Switch like so many other smaller current-gen games looking for a second chance at glory.

To be fair, this one deserves it to an extent because it’s probably the best version of Pang to date.

It goes for a ‘world tour’ theme, meaning your role is to fly around the planet, visiting various locations and using your harpoon gun to destroy all the killer balloons floating around.

In typical Pang fashion, each time you destroy a balloon it splits into two smaller balloons, meaning there’s a light element of strategy here: if you go guns-a-blazing right away and destroy all the big balloons, you could end up with a sea of tiny, hard-to-hit ones resulting in your inevitable death (it’s one-touch kills in this one).

Oddly though, the best thing about the game is the fact that it gives you infinite lives, something the previous ‘80s and ‘90s Pang games didn’t do.

It may seem strange to praise a game for offering less of a challenge, but by its very nature Pang can be pretty difficult when you’ve got loads of bubbles bouncing all over the place.

It’s not like having endless lives means you can soar through it: when you die you start the level from the beginning, so you still have to beat each stage cleanly without taking a hit. It just means you a least have a chance of seeing the later stages, whereas in the past when you reached a particularly tricky one you that was probably where you’d lose all your lives, get Game Over and have to start again.

Pang has always been a series I’ve played for 10 minutes or so before bailing when it started getting annoying, but this one? This one I like.


Clouds & Sheep 2

HandyGames
Switch, Xbox One, PS4, PC, iOS, Android (Switch version reviewed)

How much I’ve played – About 3-4 hours’ worth

Another game that was originally released on mobile, Clouds & Sheep 2 hit iOS and Android about three and a half years ago and now it’s on Switch.

Starting off with a single sheep in a small field, the aim is to eventually increase the former in number and the latter in size so you end up with the sort of bustling sheep paradise that would have farmers soiling their slacks in excitement.

To do this you have to perform a series of tasks and fulfil your sheep’s needs (not like that, you pervert) in order to make sure they’re happy. Get two sheep to fall in love and a baby sheep will turn up, continuing the circle of life and no doubt making Elton John shed a tear.

One gimmick is the ability to control the clouds, hence the title: if you combine enough clouds together you can create either a rain cloud or thunder cloud to water things or destroy objects respectively.

It looks nice enough and the music is pleasant (if repetitive), but by a mere two hours in I already felt I was done with it. It can often be annoying waiting for certain resources to build, and even though there are loads of objects and pieces of scenery you can work towards affording and placing in your field, I really couldn’t muster up the enthusiasm.

Although it isn’t identical, I had more fun playing New Frontier Days, which is a similar mobile-based resource management game. I have no doubt that Clouds & Sheep 2 will appeal to some who are fans of this genre. It just didn’t click with me.


Super Hero Fight Club: Reloaded

Incuvo / Qubic Games
Switch, PC (Switch version reviewed)

How much I’ve played – Cleared Arcade mode, beat about 10 challenges

Ever since the cult success of Towerfall, countless indie developers have been trying to strike gold with a new multiplayer party game to replace it. This isn’t it, but it isn’t terrible.

It’s a retro-themed one-hit-kills jousting game, where the aim is to win each round by hitting your opponent before they hit you.

Each character can fly around in any direction, but the twist is that there are three distinct weapon types, each with their own strengths and weaknesses.

Straight swords and lances are the easiest to use – because you simply fly into your opponent to beat them – but they have the shortest range.

Spinning weapons (like a ball and chain, or mouse and cable if you’re playing as the ‘Anonymous’ keyboard warrior) have a longer range, but also require a lot more skill because you have to swing them around manually, using the game’s momentum and physics.

Meanwhile, projectile weapons (guns, arrows and the like) obviously have a much longer range, but also have a short pause between shots, meaning if you miss you’re exposed to attack for a while.

In theory this sounds like it could be rife with strategic possibilities, but in reality it isn’t very well-balanced. The spinning weapons require too much skill and the long-range weapons aren’t accurate enough to justify their slow reloading, meaning characters with swords are almost always the best option.

It does try to keep things interesting with power-ups and a few single-player modes (like a level-based ‘arcade’ mode and a series of challenges), but its imbalance means it’s only really at its best – be it solo or in multiplayer – when two characters have the same type of weapon.


Feudal Alloy

Attu Games
Switch, Xbox One, PS4, PC (Switch version reviewed)

How much I’ve played – around 4 hours

It’s been around five minutes since you last read about a Metroidvania game, so judging by my watch that means it’s probably time for another one.

Feudal Alloy puts you in the metallic feet of Attu, a medieval robot who’s controlled by a fish that swims around in a tank in its head.

After a bunch of outlaws ransacks his village, burns his house down and steals the town’s oil supplies, Alloy decides to head out, rusty old sword in tow, to find them and dish out some robo-justice.

Don’t worry about any of that, though: this is all just an excuse to explore yet another large area filled with a bunch of smaller rooms, some of which can’t be accessed until you get new skills later in the game.

It looks nice enough – going down the hand-drawn look instead of the 8-bit or 16-bit look means it feels a little less generic – and the music’s fine too.

But it’s just… I don’t know. There are just so many of these games now, you know?

It’s not without its flaws. In the early few hours enemies can take a little too long to kill: this leads to you taking frustrating levels of damage as a result, and makes combat feel unsatisfying. It doesn’t really feel like your battling enemies, more chipping away at them with a spoon.

Checkpoints are a tad too far apart too, meaning when you die (which you will) you’ll find yourself retracing your steps too often.

The result is a game that is by no means the best of its genre, but is perfectly harmless in every way. And yet, there are so many others on the Switch that I would only really say “get this” if you’ve already played through, say, Hollow Knight.

Or Dead Cells. Or Gris. Or Axiom Verge. Or SteamWorld Dig 2. Or The Mummy Demastered. Or Yoku’s Island Express. Or Bloodstained. Or Guacamelee.


Forever Forest

Mad About Pandas / Fictive Studio
Nintendo Switch

How much I’ve played – 3-4 hours

Last up is this odd survival game developed by German studio Mad About Pandas.

Forever Forest has you exploring a massive woodland area as a small masked creature. You have to head north, lighting up the various temples you come across in order to illuminate the entire forest.

As you do this you’ll encounter progressively more difficult enemies, but you can attack them and take their horns, which can then be traded at shrines for new abilities and upgrades.

It’s a simple idea, but it can take a while to get used to. Its is a bit of a mixed bag: it’s minimalist enough to leave you trying to figure out what to do next, while at the same time the menus are clunky enough to take a little too long to adapt to.

Meanwhile, although the actual game itself is easy enough to play – you have one main rolling pounce that doubles as both your attack and an evasive move – other elements, like the power-ups you can collect and activate, can be confusing.

It doesn’t help that the game regularly stutters and can be pretty bloody glitchy in general. I spent my first 40 minutes completely stuck until I realised the fact I couldn’t get into the first temple at the beginning of the game was down to a weird bug blocking my entry. After restarting the game I wandered in with no problems.

Forever Forest looks atmospheric and definitely gets points for artistic merit, but its deliberately vague nature makes playing it confusing at times, and when you do know what’s going on the performance issues are constantly irritating.

Much as I like its style, this is one forest I sadly don’t see myself playing through forever.


Review code for each game was provided by PRs. The opinions in my reviews are in no way influenced by how I received the games.

If you enjoyed this and want to help me write more reviews and wee-views on a regular basis while continuing to make the site ad-free, please consider donating to my Patreon account.

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Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes (Switch) review

Grasshopper Manufacturer / Nintendo
Nintendo Switch

Cult game designer Suda51 has always made games that divide opinion.

Whether it’s the heavily stylised Killer7, the sexually provocative Lollipop Chainsaw, the punk rock demon hunting of Shadows Of The Damned or the combo-based bloodfest that is Killer Is Dead, gamers have always been split into two camps: those who believe his games have always felt a little rough around the edges, and those who say his often eccentric and bizarre storylines make up for it.

On Nintendo systems, Suda’s best known for the two No More Heroes games, which very much embodied this division. The story of nerdy otaku Travis Touchdown and his quest to kill everyone on a global assassin leaderboard was criticised by some for its slightly clunky combat and repetitive action, but praised by others for its outlandish plot, lashings of gore (in some regions) and tendency to shatter the fourth wall into tiny polygonal pieces.

It’s been eight years since No More Heroes 2, and those who fall into the second camp (including me) have been desperately praying for a third game in the series. Travis Strikes Again isn’t it, but it’s a fun spin-off that should satisfy their cravings for a while. Continue reading “Travis Strikes Again: No More Heroes (Switch) review”

New Super Mario Bros U Deluxe (Switch) review

Nintendo / Nintendo EAD
Nintendo Switch, Wii U (Switch version reviewed)

The Switch will be two years old in just a couple of months, and Nintendo has diligently been ticking its way through the boxes to ensure each of its much-loved series are represented on the system.

Mario Kart? Tick. Zelda? Tick. 3D Mario, Smash Bros, Pokemon? Tick, tick, tick. At this point there are more ticks than you’d find at a particularly grubby pet shop.

Up next, then, is the series that kickstarted Nintendo’s home console success in the first place, Super Mario Bros. More specifically, a port of the Wii U’s offering, New Super Mario Bros U.

This Deluxe version pairs the main game with its Luigi-based DLC, adds a couple of new playable characters, and chucks in a resolution boost from 720p to 1080p for good measure. This makes it the definitive version of the game, but there are a couple of caveats in there. Continue reading “New Super Mario Bros U Deluxe (Switch) review”

Video preview – New Super Mario Bros U Deluxe (Switch)

Nintendo’s kicking off 2019 with another Wii U port, as New Super Mario Bros U Deluxe comes to the Switch on 11 January.

The Wii U version was much-loved by those who played it and ended up being the third-best selling title on the console, with 5.77 million copies sold.

Of course, given that the Wii U console sales themselves were poor, that made it a big fish in a small pond. Nintendo will be hoping that by putting the game on Switch – which already has a larger user base than the Wii U and continues to grow – it’ll reach a much greater audience more in line with the Wii and DS New Super Mario Bros games, which each shifted around 30 million.

Naturally, yer man Scullion’s been sent review code by Nintendo, and I’ve already started playing it. I’ll have a review ready before the game’s out, but it’s currently embargoed up the wazoo so you’ll have to wait until early 2019 for that.

Until then, here’s an 11-minute video in which I talk you through what’s new, show off the new characters and try to rewrite the lyrics to The Pogues’ Fairytale Of New York. Enjoy.

New Super Mario Bros U Deluxe is available on Nintendo Switch on 11 January. You can pre-order the physical version from Amazon UK.

In order that I could put this preview together, I received a digital copy of the game from Nintendo. The content of this preview was in no way positively influenced by this.

If you enjoyed this and want to help me post more frequent articles, please consider donating to my Patreon account.

Don’t want to commit to a regular payment? I’ve now got a PayPal ‘tips’ jar: if you like what you read feel free to chuck yer man Scullion a couple of quid here or there and help stock up my Irn Bru fund so I can continue working away like a bastard.

Donate with PayPal

Alternatively, if you’re a UK reader and can’t afford to support me on Patreon, please do your normal Amazon UK shopping via this linkTired Old Hack is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for me to earn fees by linking to Amazon.co.uk and affiliated sites.

Super Smash Bros Ultimate (Switch) single-player review

Nintendo / Sora Ltd / Bandai Namco
Nintendo Switch

Well, it’s finally here. Actually, it was here a week ago but I didn’t get code until the day before launch so you’re getting a review now.

Regardless, the point remains: Super Smash Bros Ultimate is now on Switch, giving Nintendo’s already popular system another massive boost. And, judging by early sales figures – roughly 1.3 million sold in Japan already, toppling Red Dead 2 in the UK and the like – it’s clear it’s going to be a huge success.

It’s safe to say this is mainly down to Smash’s multiplayer gameplay. After all, Smash has always been known as a multiplayer fighter first and foremost, and with this new Switch version once again offering support for up to eight players simultaneously it goes without saying that many of the fans buying the game are doing so to fight against their friends or online.

Not everyone likes playing online, though, or playing with their pals, or just people in general. Some folk – yer man Scullion included – are strictly solo gamers, and in that situation it’s maybe a little less immediately clear how long the game’s going to last. Well, I’m going to tell you. Continue reading “Super Smash Bros Ultimate (Switch) single-player review”

Pokémon: Let’s Go Pikachu / Eevee (Switch) review

Nintendo / The Pokémon Company International / Game Freak
Nintendo Switch

This review needs a bit of a disclaimer first, because different people play Pokémon in different ways.

Some like to focus mainly on the battling side of things, their priority being the building of an unbeatable squad of Pokémon that can take out any hapless sod foolish enough to challenge them to a fight locally or online.

Others consider it more of a solo affair: their focus is on playing through the main game, defeating the Elite Four and then – if they’re still keen on more – attempting to ‘catch ‘em all’ and fill their Pokédex.

To be clear, I fit very much into the latter category, and this may affect the review you’re about to read. You see, Pokémon Let’s Go does feel like the sort of game that will appeal more to collectors than battlers. Continue reading “Pokémon: Let’s Go Pikachu / Eevee (Switch) review”

Wee-views: Sega Ages Sonic, Picture Painting Puzzle, Party Crashers, Pilot Sports, Timber Tennis, Mr Tako

Welcome to wee-views!

Those who’ve been following me on Twitter will already know my life’s been pretty hectic these days.

My wife and I now have a gorgeous baby girl, my first book is due for release in March and I’m juggling a 9-to-5 on top of all that.

As a result of this, the number of reviews I’ve been putting on the site has dropped dramatically: there just aren’t enough hours in the day any more to play these games.

If you don’t like this new idea, direct all complaints to Serena Scullion. But bear in mind she can’t read

Well, actually, there are. There just aren’t enough hours to finish them. And that’s where wee-views come in.

The general rule for reviewers (or at least the rule I’ve always followed) is that you should always complete a game where possible before writing the review.

That way, if there are any odd quirks near the end of the game – a sudden rise or drop in quality, some brilliant post-game content, a game-breaking bug, that sort of thing – you’ll be in a position to mention it in the review and deliver a comprehensive, complete verdict with all of this in mind.

The thing is, after 12 and a half years of doing this, I’d like to think I’ve got a fairly good grasp now on whether a game is good after a few hours of playing it. Granted, there will always be those “you need to put some time into it before it gets great” situations, but those are fairly uncommon, especially with the smaller non-triple A games I tend to play and cover on the site.

Wee-views are mini reviews where I make it clear – both in this intro and a ‘how much I’ve played’ section in each wee-view – that the verdicts I’ve reached are based on me playing enough of the game to decide what I think of it, but not necessarily playing it to completion.

If you aren’t keen on this idea, don’t worry: I’ll still be doing ‘proper’ reviews of bigger games and the like. This is just a way for me to help advise you on a wider range of new games with opinions that are generally going to be fairly accurate rather than spending a long time trying to beat a single game.

Put it this way: if you’re at school / at work / in the pub with a mate who has a game you’re interested in, and you ask them “is it any good?”, you can pretty much guarantee they won’t reply: “I can’t say yet, I haven’t finished it.” They’ll always tell you what they think, even though they haven’t seen the credits. That’s the idea here.

So there we go, that’s wee-views. Let me know what you think of this first batch and your opinion on the concept in general: that aside, let’s get cracking. Continue reading “Wee-views: Sega Ages Sonic, Picture Painting Puzzle, Party Crashers, Pilot Sports, Timber Tennis, Mr Tako”

Starlink: Battle For Atlas (Switch) review

Ubisoft / Ubisoft Toronto
Switch, Xbox One, PS4 (Switch version reviewed)

This review is available in both written and video format. Naturally, the video shows the game in action while I read the review as a voiceover. If you watch the video, then, you don’t need to read the written review that follows since it’s the same ‘script’.

It’s fair to say the toys-to-life genre is on its arse.

What began as a craze when Skylanders appeared seven years ago has burned out: plastic figures now replace plastic guitars in this generation’s second-hand game shops.

Skylanders may not officially be dead but considering Activision hasn’t released one of its annual games since 2016, it’s safe to say it’s been benched indefinitely.

Meanwhile, the death of Disney Infinity and Lego Dimensions – two games much better than Skylanders – showed that not even two of the world’s strongest child-friendly IP could stop the toys-to-life boat sinking.

The only thing still hanging in there are amiibo, but that’s because they’re video game themed – not Disney, Lego or original creations – and many gamers (like myself) collect them for display purposes.

It’s a little odd, then, that as toys-to-life finds itself lying in a coma, Ubisoft’s turned up at the hospital with a crate of beer looking for a party.

Continuing the plastic guitar analogy, Starlink is the DJ Hero of toys-to-life, turning up late in the genre’s life and offering one more inventive way to breathe new life into it.

I know what you’re thinking. I was thinking it too. But before you roll your eyes and say “too little, too late”, do consider that Ubisoft has made a very clever decision that could make all the difference to you:

You don’t need the toys. In fact, the game is much better without them. Continue reading “Starlink: Battle For Atlas (Switch) review”

NBA 2K19 (Xbox One) review

2K Sports / Visual Concepts
Xbox One, PS4, Switch, PC (Xbox One version reviewed)

This review is available in both written and video format. Naturally, the video shows the game in action while I read the review as a voiceover. If you watch the video, then, you don’t need to read the written review that follows since it’s the same ‘script’.

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the NBA 2K series, which started in 1999 with the fittingly named NBA 2K on the Dreamcast.

For two decades now developer Visual Concepts has been tweaking and improving its take on America’s third-favourite sport, and by this point it’s got everything down to a fine art: on the court, at least.

At this stage NBA 2K is as close to a perfect representation of basketball as you can get, so it’s probably unsurprising that things don’t feel massively different this year compared to 2K18. Continue reading “NBA 2K19 (Xbox One) review”

Capcom Beat ‘Em Up Bundle (Xbox One) review

Capcom
Xbox One, Switch, PS4, Steam (Xbox One version reviewed)

This review is available in both written and video format. Naturally, the video shows the game in action while I read the review as a voiceover. If you watch the video, then, you don’t need to read the written review that follows since it’s the same ‘script’.

I’ve been an enormous fan of the beat ’em up genre for decades now, though it’s not as prolific as it was back in the days of ’90s arcade gaming.

Capcom was arguably the company most responsible for the growth of the beat ’em up in those days, with 1989’s groundbreaking Final Fight the main driving force.

It was such an important and much-loved game that if you owned an arcade and you didn’t have Final Fight, you didn’t really own an arcade at all: you just had a bunch of shiny light-up boxes in a big room.

Naturally, Final Fight is very much present and accounted for in this fantastic compilation of seven Capcom beat ’em ups spanning from 1989-1997. Continue reading “Capcom Beat ‘Em Up Bundle (Xbox One) review”