One of the best "Journey-likes" since Journey, easily. The climbing mechanics here are so well thought out and realized, getting the hang of them felt extremely satisfying. Great atmosphere as well. The story as found in the notes I was far less into and it felt overwritten. I also thought the ending could have really stood to do a bit more with all of the mechanics introduced so far so it felt a bit on the weak side for me. But wow, I'd honestly love to see more games take the piton/rope system here because it felt like a revelation in this game. Did not know Dontnod was capable of making something like this.

A game that I just could not help but root for even when it was doing things I wasn't a huge fan of. John Johanas is really going places, between this and Evil Within 2 the guy seems to really know what he's doing. This is insanely polished and focused. Really dug the artstyle and the character designs are great as well. Funny enough I think the audio mixing by default leaves the music a little quiet.

Despite being pretty alright at both action games and rhythm games, something about the way this works here never quite clicked in my head, though I acknowledge that's likely on my end. The fact I saw this through regardless is a testament to how good everything else is. That said, I do think that a lot of the finer points of character action design were not quite nailed here - optimal play seems to be spamming your assists whenever they get off cooldown while hammering along to the beat, and having some enemies designed to be invulnerable to all but one attack that is on a cooldown, even if a short cooldown, I find kind of antithetical to how games like this should work. Excited to see what Tango and specifically what John Johanas ends up doing next.

I always viewed Mario and Luigi as a series to be less charming than the earlier Paper Mario games, and after playing this I'm glad to find out I was wrong for the most part. This game is actually pretty inventive and funny! Also really appreciated some pretty solid overworld/dungeon puzzle design. Probably ranks better than the OG Super Mario RPG in my books.

A pretty good time with some heartfelt moments and a lovely HD-Wii aesthetic. A lot does feel pretty low budget but for the most part (other than some really noticeable lack of proper sound effects/mixing in cutscenes) I found the presentation charming. The pacing sometimes struggles especially in Another Code R however, and I can't help but feel that the stories being told here didn't fully connect with me. A story that leaned much more heavily into the messiness of family memories, idealization of parents, etc. I think would have been a home run but this pulls its punches a bit too often for my liking. Still I watched those credits with a big smile on my face so this did manage to end up endearing me to most of its characters by the end.

Edit: Upon looking up more about the original games, I think this remake actually needed way MORE hardware gimmicks. I liked any time the remakes forced some gyro controls for puzzles, but other than that things are pretty straightforward, and it really seems like one of the original selling points of the first Another Code was in just how many creative ways it used the DS. I'd almost have liked it if they just forced you to only play in handheld mode and used the touchscreen for more puzzles like the DS game, or hell the IR sensor on the right joy-con as well.

This should really not be $50 but I was surprised at just how much fun I had. The first half of the game is a walk in the park but the plus and expert levels were legitimately challenging, and I think in general this is just a pretty well designed puzzle platformer with a good deal of charm. Soundtrack also is insanely good for no reason

This could have stood to be a bit harder and have a bit more variety with its roguelike elements (only 4 objective types seems strange honestly) but this is still a ton of fun and just reinforced for me how much I love the world of Splatoon

Honestly not bad, although it feels incredibly cheap/chintzy for a first party Nintendo game and never really feels like it builds to anything. The core gameplay concept is pretty fun though!

I think what really threw people about this was the combo of the controls absolutely having a huge learning curve combined with Platinum's "the first playthrough is the tutorial" style design, you do both at once and the average player is going to be left with a horrible first impression. That said, even when you get over that hump there isn't a ton here. Moments of greatness with some genuinely fun bosses and setpieces hampered by a lot of middling levels and mechanics that don't feel fully fleshed out. Also the fact that this is ANOTHER Star Fox retelling is extremely lame and yes I will blame Miyamoto for that one

Got the "layer 2" ending, with some admitted help from a guide on some of the trickier eggs. This is a really well crafted exploration game and I think it's truly genius about teaching you its mechanics. The items you get are unique for the genre too, which leads to a lot of fun discoveries and novel ways to solve puzzles.

Had an enjoyable time, but I will say there is something holding it back just a bit for me, a lack of escalation or truly pushing some of its later game items to work in tandem with each other to make more complex puzzles (I think both endings fall pretty flat as well which doesn't help that search for something a bit more satisfying). There are some extremely complex puzzles here, but they're more in the vain of ARG super freak codebreaking than getting the game's core toolset to interact in interesting ways. If you're a fan of the ARG type stuff though, it probably would go up a lot in your estimation.

Also shoutout to some absolutely stellar sound design.

Killer soundtrack and lots of quirky charm offset by the fact that this is the only mainline mario platformer that I would say just straight up feels bad to control and the level design is mid