This aināt Mario Party, itās Wii Party. Nintendoās latest effort at a party game once again features mini-games. Did someone say āmini-gamesā?
Wii Party sports over 80 mini-games and features Miis as the in-game characters. The Japanese version of the game ā which I played ā has 14 game modes, while the U.S. version has 13. The missing mode is a karuta game mode. (Besides this difference, they are the same game!) These modes are divvied up into āParty Gamesā (for 1-4 players) āPair Gamesā (for 2 players) and āHouse Party Gamesā (for more than 2 players). Rounds of Wii Party can be short (say 5 ā 15 minutes for āBalance Shipā) or long (approximately 60 minutes for āGlobe Trotā). While playing, mini-games came in rapid succession as the gameās pace zips along.
Ideal Player
Wii Party works best with more than two people. Casuals seem to dig the title. Little kids, too. So large families with casual gamers and/or children?
Why You Should Care
This is the one of the Wiiās big holiday games.
Arenāt you sick of mini-games? Yes, yes I am. Yet, for some odd reason, the mini-games in Wii Party did not piss me off to no end. And there are some stinkers (āWii Bingoā, ungh), but playing through it with my family was a blast.
Really? Oh yeah. The thing I like about Wii Party, which is also the thing I like about Wii Sports, is that even my in-laws, who do not play video games, can play Wii Party with my kids. They really, really enjoyed the hide-and-seek āHide ānā Huntā game as well as the animal-sound-emitting Animal Tracker and the matching game, āSwap Meetā. In that regards, Wii Party succeeds.
Sounds like kids stuff. Well, not all of it. The āFriend Connectionā game, in which players answer the same question to determine compatibility, is fun with grown-ups. Ditto for the balancing game āBalance Shipā and the Mario Party-esque board game āGlobe Trotā. There are a whole host of mini-games that can be enjoyed by adults like āSmile Snapā, āCommuter Countā, āWalk-Offā and āWord Bombā.
Any gripes? Some of the games arenāt as fun (hello āTeamwork Templeā) and sometimes the controls are iffy, but thankfully, the mini-games are always short, and there are a whole bunch of them. Players never feel bogged down.
Thatās it? While playing Wii Party, I actually turned to my family and said, āThis gameās music is horrid.ā I donāt remember doing that in recent memory. Oh, wait. I might have said the same thing for Wii Sports.
Wii Party In Action
The Bottom Line
Admitting one likes Wii Party is probably best done in private, but Iāll go ahead and do it here: I like Wii Party. Actually, Iām kind of surprised how much I like it. Playing through games like āRoll To The Goalā or āPopgun Posseā with my kids have been satisfying experiences. Thatās not necessarily because the games are brilliant or amazing, but because my family have had loads of fun.
Wii Party was developed by Nd Cube and Nintendo EAD. It was published by Nintendo and released on July 8 in Japan and on October 3 in North America. Retails for $49.99. A copy was purchased by me and played through by the entire Ashcraft family.