kirby mass attack
Kirby Mass Attack
Like the titular pink puff, the Kirby series has worn many hats in its
nineteen years. Almost every 2D action-platformer has been partnered
with an experimental pinball sim or an arcade racer or some amazing
miniature golf mutation. As much as I enjoy each iteration of the main
Dream Land style, the spinoffs are what really intrigue me, even when
they fail. Sure, Kirby Tilt 'n Tumble may be unplayable with the Game
Boy Color's dark screen and restrictive viewing angle, but it broke
ground for motion controls six years before Wii Sports taught us to
waggle.
It's a good season for Kirby fans, as we get a bit of both sides in under two months. Kirby's Return to Dream Land in October looks like the long-awaited Super Star successor, and September sees Kirby get multiplied in Kirby Mass Attack. Revisiting the stylus-centrism of Canvas Curse, Mass Attack tasks players with flicking, dragging, and leading up to ten Kirbys at a time through a puzzle platforming adventure. It's not the most eye-opening Kirby spinoff -- the concept is essentially a pared-down Pikmin -- but it makes the most of a middling concept.
Kirby Canvas Curse was widely dubbed the Nintendo DS's first worthy purchase. Kirby Mass Attack may be its last.
