![]() ![]() Along the way you’ll encounter all manners of road blocks, determined to drain your blob to nothing more than a tiny drip. Much deeper than the aforementioned titles (thanks in part to the fiendish level design), gliding your blob of liquid to the end goal is the least of your worries. In fact, it’s far more suited to the motion-sensing shenanigans of the Wii remote than its digital pad equivalents. But before you fret and kick up a fuss over the idea that it’s just another PS2 port with added waggle, you should probably take into account that despite being a port, Mercury fares far better than its older incarnations. ![]() ![]() This is now the third such puzzler to base a game around such a simple premise since the Wii’s launch well over seven months ago. Tilting the game world using the Wii remote, as you glide a blob of liquid as in Mercury‘s case, evidently seems as obvious as using the remote as a baseball bat. What is it with the Wii and balls? First Super Monkey Ball, then Kororinpa, and now Mercury Meltdown Revolution, have all found their home on the Wii, with varying degrees of success. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |