A quick play may unlock all the characters' levels but only a fraction of the games, so you'll need to keep practising to discover them all. It's just as fun to watch someone else playing as it is to play yourself!Īs you complete each character's collection of games, you'll unlock new areas of the city to travel to, containing more characters and also, as in previous WarioWares, longer, more in-depth minigames that you'll want to return to again and again to beat your high score.īut the heart of WarioWare: Smooth Moves is in its microgames - all 200+ of them. Soon, though, you'll be lifting the Remote above your head and hopping up and down ('The Mohawk'), holding it at your waist and thrusting your hips around ('The Big Cheese') and even raising it in front of your nose, known for obvious reasons as 'The Elephant'. There's 'The Remote Control' (hold the Wii Remote like a TV remote), 'The Umbrella' (hold it vertically, as if gripping a brolly), and 'The Sketch Artist' (hold it like a pencil). The first poses you'll learn are simple and relatively embarrassment-free. And you'd better leave your shame at the door because Wario and friends will have you performing some pretty outrageous gestures. These instructions, known as 'pose cards', flash on the screen before each game giving you a second to prepare your pose. The first time you play, each character introduces you to the techniques required to play the microgames, based around holding the Wii Remote in a certain way. ![]() There are also a few newcomers in the shape of Penny Crygor (granddaughter of mad professor Dr Crygor) and junior samurai Young Cricket who has a fondness for Japanese dumplings. Many WarioWare favourites return, including Mona (now a cheerleader), disco dude Jimmy T, taxi driving cat and dog duo Dribble & Spitz and retro Nintendo fanboy 9-Volt. Like the previous versions of WarioWare you move around the city, taking on challenges set by each character. And so begins a series of more than 200 fast and funny microgames hosted by Wario and the strange inhabitants of Diamond City. ![]() In WarioWare: Smooth Moves, greed has once again got the better of Wario when he pilfers an ancient artefact called the Form Baton (which bears an uncanny resemblance to a Wii Remote). In fact, on Wii, Wario is more crude and rude than ever before. Yes, folks, Wario is backĮven though he's moved over to our shiny new console it's clear that Mario's nemesis hasn't cleaned up his act one bit. There aren't many games that involve washing a cow's backside, inserting false teeth into a granny's mouth or wafting away noxious fart fumes.
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