Pros: Highly addictive and fun puzzle game
Cons: Graphics dated;
some elements are childish
The Bottom Line:
Don't stop flipping blocks
They'll rise before you know it
You won't want to stop
Addicted to this Puzzle Game after Just One Time Playing It
I was introduced to the SNES version of Tetris Attack at a
friend's house. I was immediately hooked
and haunted Best Buy to play their in store version until I was able to get my
own copy of the game. Even know, I'll
pull it out and enjoy some time playing it.
While the game has Tetris in the title, it bears no
resemblance to the famous Russian game.
Here, you are trying to clear a field of blocks coming up from the
bottom before they reach the top of your screen. You can move two adjacent blocks at a time
horizontally, and when you make a match of three or more bricks, they disappear
and the rest of the field lowers to fill in the gap.
Sounds simple and easy enough, right? It can be, but it can also be quite
challenging depending on speed and level of play. It's amazing how addicting it can be. Just one more time so I can beat the level.
This game works for one or two players. As one player, you can all kinds of
options. You can play for time and
score, work to solve a puzzle, or work to clear blocks below a line.
While those are fun, I always found the two player version
to be the best. You can play this
version with an opponent or against the computer. The object here is to keep your blocks from
getting to the top while forcing your opponent's to the top. How do you do that? Well, every time you clear more than three
blocks at a time or create a chain of clearing blocks, a "garbage"
block lands on top of your opponent.
First, they must clear a block touching these garbage blocks. That will case the garbage block to break
down into regular blocks which can then be removed. If you are good at the game, those garbage
blocks can add up quickly, making it very hard on your opponent.
The one player "vs." mode creates a bit of a story
based on the Nintendo character of Yoshi.
His friends have been placed under a spell by Bowser. As you defeat them, you free them from the
spell. Once they are all free, you have
to defeat some of Bowser's minions and then Bowser himself. Obviously, the higher up you go, the harder
the opponent is.
That does bring up my only real gripe with the game - by
centering it around Yoshi, it seems a little childish. The graphics surrounding the game board are
very cartoony, and the SNES graphics don't help that. The sounds, also, are very much aimed at
kids. Fortunately, the sounds have no
impact on the game play, so I usually turn the volume down and play without the
sound.
Even the game board is rather simple graphically. Then again, that's not really an issue since
you don't really need much. We are
talking about squares with different shapes on them. Yes, it would look better on a system that
isn't almost 20 years old, but the graphics are never an issue with game play.
The controls are also straight forward. You use the plus to move up and down or left
and right and you use the buttons to switch the two blocks you've
selected. The game is very responsive
and, much as I'd like to, I can't blame the controller when I lose.
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