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Kirby's getting angry again. It happens every time he comes to America, it seems. He's happy and joyful at home in Japan, always wearing a smile and looking like he's having a good time. First up ...
Conveniently, Nintendo’s newest console, the Wii U, also has a touchscreen. So, Canvas Curse gets a sequel in Kirby in the Rainbow Curse, which is out now.
Forget Mario Kart 8. Kirby and the Rainbow Curse is about to become the Wii U’s most beautiful game. After the game charmed me, I was able to ask the game’s art director, Teruhiko Suzuki, how ...
Kirby Canvas Curse takes the concept--drawing lines to create pathways, bridges, ramps, and the like--and completes it, delivering a full game that feels fresh and has a lot to it.
Kirby: Canvas Curse works. Works. It’s… it’s so damn close to perfect it squeaks when you walk past it. Here’s the game for you: you have a pink ball, and you draw lines for it to roll along.
It's bizarre that Kirby and the Rainbow Curse even exists. As a sequel to Kirby: Canvas Curse, it borrows wholesale the mechanics of a game that successfully showed off the unique capabilities of ...
Reviewed on:Nintendo DS Publisher:Nintendo Developer:Hal Laboratory The Good:Has an open-concept style to the gameplay that puts the stylus to very good use. The Bad:A little on the short side and ...
Canvas Curse plays like a mix of touchy-feely pinball and a typical Kirby title. Our pink pal retains the ability to suck up enemies and steal their powers, but the twist here is making sure Kirby ...
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