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Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Videogame Review, Yoshi for the Nintendo Entertainment System (Nintendo Wii U)




Videogame Review, Yoshi for the Nintendo Entertainment System (Nintendo Wii U)


Everything can be understood about this game in 15 minutes.  Yoshi is a flick one can expect from a nickelodeon machine since the whole game is very short and is designed with cute, adorable creatures.  It takes pride for Nintendo to display ghosts and monsters in sweet colors that help make horror within Mario’s tough adventure more pleasant and entertaining, as the plumber this time around captures animals on platters while eventually letting Yoshi’s eggs hatch.  Yoshi is a tiny, green dinosaur in this four-element puzzle.  Elements include ghosts, goombas, squids, and flower traps which add more than enough tension in the later levels for Nintendo fans devoted to the cause over the years; in fact, Yoshi is one of the most intense button mashers you’ll find in Nintendo’s library of classics to date.  Like I said everything can be understood in 15 minutes.  There’s something about mashing buttons really quickly that suggests Yoshi’s relationship with a gamer who enjoys multitasking.  Multitasking in of itself has been under scrutiny in the viewpoints of companies like TripAdvisor and eBay, but it’s also been praised for by McDonald’s and Walmart.  By the time Yoshi was released in the early 90’s Sears was no longer the giant over markets like the business enterprise used to be; according to my dad, Sears’ decline in the marketplace was probably due to their lack of shopping carts in remote areas across the U.S.A., and as such, people became willing to use shopping carts at their competing markets for better opportunities in multitasking.  Whatever that short burst is for multitasking must reveal the moral quality in Yoshi: rushed, hurried, and bigoted.  Just trying to push buttons really rapidly makes my fingers twist along their sides until I’m ready to pounce on my Wii U gamepad.  Good thing I’m not actually using one of those small, original controllers for the Nintendo Entertainment System because I may actually end up breaking something.  Videogame companies do often have the strange habit of forcing gamers to treat their own controllers less nicely and more roughly and I’m not sure if Nintendo has realized the implications of our current marketplace with Wii U and Switch still turning heads.  Mode A and Mode B in 1st Player Mode are very similar in regards to Yoshi’s backpacking Mario across the fairway into a mushroom’s hiding spot where the dinosaur’s long tongue may grab onto treasures or fortunes with Mario and Yoshi’s goodness of heart typical to everyday kids programs on Nickelodeon and other children’s networks- smiles, lots of smiles, and happy faces all over things with sweet colors.  I don’t want to give away too much information about my family due to the internet privacy issue; however, I will say that we have relatives and friends who work in different television studios and make their living doing small tasks in craft, art, and performance, most of which will attract little serious interest and will be part of humanity’s disappearance in nature during its constant birthdays and surprises.  Yoshi isn’t a game with the depth of Super Mario Bros. and will be completed in a short time for gamers who know their stuff like I do.  Even Vanguard for the Atari 5200 console has a lot more depth than Yoshi.  Still, if you’re looking for adorable design, brilliance, and feel, Yoshi will leave you with a happy face on… and not like Joker’s in the Batman comic series.

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