![]() Monkey Target mixes a ramp roll with paraglider-style sailing, but the controls will be too finicky for casual group play. While Monkey Billiards, Bowling, and Golf offer a respectable adaptation of the nine-ball, ten-pin, and miniature golf, other mini games aren’t as successful. The main difference is you have direction control over your character, making it feel like a kart racer played with hamster balls.Įxpectedly, there’s a range is quality. Some of these recreations build on existing concepts, such as Monkey Racing’s speed rolling competitions. The traditional party games return offering a dozen different mini games that can accommodate up to four local players. ![]() Like any entry in the franchise, the game main campaign is only one slice of the banana. While narrative has rarely been a crucial part of the Monkey Ball formula, here the static images lack the charm of the original game. But one alteration that is undisputable is the game’s simplification of story cutscenes. Of course, the difference might also be attributed to the use of a different controller. Perhaps, this is a consequence of Banana Mania being a remake. There’s no perceptible difference in the amount of precision or even responsiveness, but its feels just different enough to mess with muscle memory. What I found is that Banana Mania’s controls aren’t an absolute restoration of the original games. I thought years of RPGs has dulled my reflexes, so I reconnected my old handled, lavender-colored console to assess the damage that time has done. Naturally, you’ll forgo earning a spot on the game’s online leaderboards.Īs I made my way through Banana Mania, I started failing some of the stages that I remembered acing on the Gamecube. You can manually turn on Helper from the game’s pause menu and if you fail a single stage numerous times, Banana Mania will automatically offer support. From displaying the suitable path to the exit, doubling the time length for a level, or extending slow-motion, the assists are mercifully. Pleasingly, if you’re stuck, you can also use some of the earned currency to skip a level.Īlternatively, you can use the game’s Helper functionality to gain an oft-needed advantage. But Banana Mania veers from its arcade roots, providing an endless number of chances to complete the stage instead of assigning a preset number of lives. You’ll probably grow elated if you complete the level on the first try. Although you can head right for the exit, some appreciate the challenge of grabbing every banana that’s scattered around the stage.Ībout halfway through the game’s compilation of 300 stages, the challenge becomes lofty. Stage order is curated quite carefully, with stages gradually increasing in difficulty and imparting different Monkey Ball handling skills. Other levels can feel like a skateboarding game, expecting proficiency of a certain technique. Gain too much speed, and your hapless monkey will fly right out of the tube and fall into the great monkey void. Other feel like racers, pushing the tiny primates down rollercoaster-like halfpipes. Occasionally, you can even cheat, falling from one part of the stage and landing near the exit. Some are like puzzles, with a specific route that’s essential for success. Each of these push the game is different directions. Super Monkey Ball: Banana Mania’s levels are harvested from the first two Super Money Ball games, as well as an assortment of stages from Super Monkey Ball Deluxe. Because it’s apparently mandatory that every game has to peddle downloadable content, you can pay real cash to play as Persona 5’s Morgana, Hello Kitty, and even Suezo, the one-eyed creature from Monster Rancher.Īs cute as tiny monkeys in gacha containers are, it’s the stages that are the real star of the game. As you earn in-game currency by playing, you’ll be able to unlock additional characters like Sonic and Tails, Jet Set Radio’s Beat and Kazuma Kiryu from the Yakuza series. There’s AiAi, MeeMee, Baby, GonGon return from the original 2001 Gamecube version of Super Monkey Ball, as well as YanYan and Doctor from the Wii version of Banana Blitz. While most games put you in control of the lead character, Super Money Ball had you panning and tilting the entire playfield.Īs a commemoration, the recent release of Super Monkey Ball: Banana Mania provides playable primates from across SEGA’s properties. Summarily, SEGA’s Super Money Ball can be described just a succinctly- “it’s a steel ball in a wooden maze puzzle, played with simians in plastic capsules”. ‘The Katamari grows larger, absorbing smaller objects that it runs over’ or ‘shoot all the Space Invaders before they descend on earth’, encapsulate two beloved classics. Some of history’s best game ideas can be easily summarized in a single sentence. Platform: PC, PlayStation 4/5, Switch, and Xbox OneĪvailability: Physical & digital delivery (console), digital delivery (PC)
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