![]() Released in Japan and Europe first, this game comes with a Wiimote for the price of a normal title, so if you are looking for an additional Wiimote get this package. This guide gives you hints and tips for each of the 9 games in this package, as well as medal listings and help on attaining the Platinum medals. = - INTRODUCTION - = Hello and welcome to the Wii Play FAQ. If you could, rate this FAQ so I can get some feedback. Or feel free to ask me any questions you wish, comment on this FAQ, ask if you want this posted on your site etc. If you are emailing me, then please have the subject title as 'Wii Play FAQ' or something similar, otherwise it will not be opened. +-+ | Contact Details | +-+ If you see a fault of ANY kind or you want to contribute some data to me, then either email me at OR speak to me on MSN Messenger on or on AIM at Crazyreyn. If you want to host my FAQ then give me an email and I'll most probably agree, as long as you don't alter anything, and if keep it in it's original format and give me full credit for creating the document. Nintendo Heartcast Episode 029: First or Worst by M.- W I I P L A Y - Nintendo Wii FAQ, Version 1.0 Last Updated - By Crazyreyn Copyright (c)2006-2007 Matthew Reynolds.Wii's Forgotten Gems: Ōkami by Katharine Byrne.Wii's Forgotten Gems: Rune Factory: Frontier by Bradly Halestorm.Nightly News Roundup: by Katharine Byrne.The Denpa Men: They Came By Wave Review by Andrew Hsieh.Wii's Forgotten Gems: Little King's Story by Luke Brown.Wii's Forgotten Gems: Muramasa: The Demon Blade by Luke Brown.Wii's Forgotten Gems: Endless Ocean: Blue World by Kevin Knezevic.Nightly News Roundup: by Michael Contino. ![]() Wii's Forgotten Gems: Fragile Dreams: Farewell Ruins of the Moon by Robin Wilde.Wii's Forgotten Gems: Rhythm Heaven Fever by Mel Turnquist.Round Table: Wii's Not-So-Forgotten Gems by Nintendojo Staff.You can also destroy missiles with missiles, though that’s usually a lucky flinch rather than a Jedi trick. You move slowly (and you’ll never get quicker), so it’s the tiny, informed movements that make all the difference. Tanks! is a nervous little game, calling for awareness as much as for precision. If your ally becomes a scrapheap, it’s best to play defensively. On your own you’ve got a few lives to your name, while dying as a duo means game over. Played alone and played with a friend, Tanks! is a different animal. As of my writing, I’ve only seen it through once). These missions never vary: you’ll learn to never stop moving against the twin green tanks of Mission 5, aspire to go so far as to hear the newly layered music of Mission 12, dread the bouncing hellfire of Mission 17… Faced with these unchanging levels one starts to feel like an arcade-urchin, mastering the ins and outs of each successive level in order to reach the end (there is an end. Things start to get hairy around Mission 5. To this Nintendo added a toy block aesthetic, ricocheting missiles, Wii Remote controls, and color-coded enemies–each with a different MO. Or hoping they get too close to a land mine. You roll around at low speeds, shooting AI tanks before they shoot you. Tanks! is essentially based on a series of Atari games by the same name (minus the “s” and the exclamation point). Here’s what makes it a Wii experience worth revisiting. You had to unlock each mini-game sequentially, you see, with passable success in one giving you the keys to the next. ![]() Yet Nintendo EAD (the developers behind Wii Play) knew to save the best for last. Even its Fishing mini-game was arguably a bigger hoot than some retail games dedicated to the pastime. And it was worth it: Wii Play‘s mini-games have more to offer than Wii Sports‘, including a welcome throwback to Duck Hunt along with a few racket sport games and tests of perception. ![]() The nine-game collection was an easy sell (and the fourth most purchased game of the console, in fact) seeing as it usually came bundled with an extra Wii Remote. It’s only a mini-game, after all, included in the certainly-not-forgotten Wii Play. It might at first seem an odd choice to include Tanks! in Nintendojo’s list of Wii’s Forgotten Gems. ![]()
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