

The descriptions for each of these control methods is great too as a smooth talking, deep voice gives the explanations for each new style, calmly telling you to hold the Wii Remote like a mop with both hands as 'the left hand represents honour, the right hand, filth' or to hold the remote on its side as finger food to celebrate 'French Fries, the ultimate muse'. To start with there’s a bunch of minigames that are controlled by holding the Wii Remote normally which will have you pointing and shooting at plates, guiding paper planes and selecting correct answers in a quiz, whereas later on you’ll be holding the Wii Remote upright in a style lovingly named ‘The Umbrella’, which will see you changing car gears, blocking incoming projectiles with a massive sword and hoovering with the controller. The Wii title sticks to this format but adds Wii Remote controls, slowly introducing you to new ways of holding the controller. You’ll be presented with around 15 quick-fire mini-games before a final boss battle and the finale to that story when the boss is complete.Īfter your first play-through you’ll be able to play that section again in true endless WarioWare style, as you play until you’re out of lives trying to get the highest score possible with the chance to recover a life every now and then if you beat a boss level. The minigames are presented to you in bunches depending on their host character and come at you one after another, getting quicker and quicker each time, as you struggle to keep completing the ever crazier tasks in a shorter timespan with your dwindling set of four lives.Įach section has its own story surrounding a character and all the stories are short enough with just the right amount of crude humour to keep you interested until the minigames begin, though thankfully you can skip these scenes after your initial play-through. Smooth Moves is filled with bite-size minigames that typically last around 3-5 seconds that rely on quick reactions and a keen eye. and providing a bunch of more in-depth GamePad oddities as Wario’s answer to Nintendo Land in Game & Wario in 2013 but the last real WarioWare game is Wii classic WarioWare: Smooth Moves and it’s now available on the Wii U eShop!Ĭlassic WarioWare gameplay is at the heart of this 2007 Wii Remote loving title, taking everything that was great about the GBA and DS games and adding even more insanity to the mix by making the then new Wii Remote the core control method.

#START PLAYING WARIOWARE SMOOTH MOVES SERIES#
The WarioWare series has spun off into a variety of directions in recent years, giving you the option to make your own crazy games in 2009’s WarioWare D.I.Y.
