Current:Home > Stocks'WarioWare: Move It!' transforms your family and friends into squirming chaos imps -Wealth Navigators Hub
'WarioWare: Move It!' transforms your family and friends into squirming chaos imps
View
Date:2025-04-14 11:11:11
It's 1 PM on a Saturday, and I've never watched my TV more closely.
Just about every five seconds, I'll be commanded to wave my arms to blend in with a kelp forest. Or I'll have to pump them like train wheels. Or I'll have to place them on my thighs and lift them to avoid oncoming rocks. There's always something new — and it's always absurd.
That's the joy of WarioWare: Move It!, out this Friday on the Nintendo Switch. After the last WarioWare game, Get It Together!, experimented with wildly imbalanced control schemes tied to different playable characters, Move It! returns to a more familiar format. You're back on even footing, playing simple microgames like those that made the first Game Boy Advance and GameCube titles so memorable. It doesn't rise to the level of the latter, but it's a marked improvement on the series' last dalliance with motion gameplay, Smooth Moves.
Better, together
No one plays WarioWare games for the plot, but I'll tell you the basic premise anyway. Wario — a dastardly bizarro version of Mario — wins an all-inclusive stay at a resort island, bringing along a score of characters that range from prepubescent ninja-twins to a space alien to a talking dog and cat in matching jumpsuits. You'll help this zany cast complete their respective chapters through "forms" bestowed by the island's residents: you may need to hold your Joy-Cons like a sword or barbells, or slap them to your face like you're Macaulay Culkin in Home Alone. After a brief, tongue-in-cheek tutorial, you'll cycle through forms to clear wave after wave of five-second microgames accompanied by instructions that span from simple to baffling: Scrub! Punch! Empty! Get Candy! Play a Card! Face the Ghost!
While the game blasts you with rapid-fire novelty, it's usually intuitive. Past WarioWare titles forced you to interpret each command through occasionally opaque button-presses. Move It! has you, well, move, which makes all the difference for folks who don't play many video games. Sure, the order to lay an egg may flummox you initially, but you'll see the arms on screen and realize it wants you to squeeze them... like, you know, you're laying an egg.
An engine for hilarious humiliation
This constant bewilderment gets much funnier with good company. I raced through all of the game's two-player Story mode with my wife and brother-in-law in a few hours. While we tag-teamed, the person sitting out got to watch a loony spectator sport, as hapless players scrambled to mime chickens pecking worms, waddle as penguins, or draw shapes with their butts. Best of all, the co-op is particularly forgiving; should you fail a task, your partner gets a shot at redemption. Should you run out of lives, you can revive by mimicking a special form on the screen.
The game's party modes aren't nearly so fun — though their unique gimmicks are worth experiencing at least once. Medusa March complicates the motion gameplay by forcing you to hold still at random. Galactic Party Quest is like Mario Party, but even more arbitrary (just what I wanted!). Who's in Control? has you scrutinize rival teams to find out who's pantomiming microgames and who's actually playing them. Of all the party modes, Go the Distance is the only one that would become a staple in my house, and that's because it's the simplest: face off at microgames until one person remains.
So while Move It! lacks the diverse competitive options that made my siblings and me sink countless evenings into the GameCube's Mega Party Game$, it's still the best WarioWare title in years. Who knows — I'll be seeing my brother and sister over Thanksgiving — maybe we'll all catch the bug again as we make utter fools of ourselves in the living room.
veryGood! (11978)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Solar Panel Tariff Threat: 8 Questions Homeowners Are Asking
- Ever wanted to stay in the Barbie DreamHouse? Now you can, but there's a catch
- Community Solar Heads for Rooftops of NYC’s Public Housing Projects
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- The Fires May be in California, but the Smoke, and its Health Effects, Travel Across the Country
- Payment of Climate Debt, by Rich Polluting Nations to Poorer Victims, a Complex Issue
- Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and More Famous Dads Who Had Kids Later in Life
- Trump's 'stop
- Why Elizabeth Holmes Still Fascinates: That Voice, the $1 Billion Dollar Lie & an 11-Year Prison Sentence
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Jenna Dewan Pens Sweet Message to Her and Channing Tatum's Fierce Daughter Everly on 10th Birthday
- TVA Votes to Close 2 Coal Plants, Despite Political Pressure from Trump and Kentucky GOP
- McCarthy says I don't know if Trump is strongest GOP candidate in 2024
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- 7 die at Panama City Beach this month; sheriff beyond frustrated by ignored warnings
- The Newest Threat to a Warming Alaskan Arctic: Beavers
- Heat blamed for more than a dozen deaths in Texas, Louisiana. Here's how to stay safe.
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Senate 2020: In the Perdue-Ossoff Senate Runoff, Support for Fossil Fuels Is the Dividing Line
2 more Connecticut officers fired after man became paralyzed in police van
The Third Rail of Climate Change: Climate Refugees
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Jessica Biel Shares Insight Into Totally Insane Life With Her and Justin Timberlake's 2 Kids
Coal Ash Contaminates Groundwater at 91% of U.S. Coal Plants, Tests Show
Judge Blocks Trump’s Arctic Offshore Drilling Expansion as Lawyers Ramp Up Legal Challenges