What does Japan like this week? Feudal Japanese fantasy battles in the form of Sengoku Basara 3 and rhythm games…
The classic Nintendo game meets bombs and castles in this fun Mario adventure. This is a strategy game compared to the original Mario versions that you have likely played or seen. The goal of the game is to blow up the enemies that you see in each level. As Mario, you have access to several types of bombs. You can upgrade your bombs in the game as you gain experience. You'll start with smaller bombs that are used for the mediocre enemies before seeing the larger bombs that are meant to do significant damage to the larger enemies, especially those that come toward the end of the game.
What does Japan like this week? Feudal Japanese fantasy battles in the form of Sengoku Basara 3 and rhythm games…
After taking a breather from dominating Japan's sales charts, Nintendo's Wii Party continues to party hard at the…
Last week's Japanese software champ, the brand-new Wii Party, had its first place festivities cut short this week…
Nintendo's newest mini-game good time, Wii Party, makes it debut in Japan, handily defeating its competitors with a…
The people who make Professor Layton games and the sharp-looking Studio Ghibli game Ni no Kuni have another hit on…
By "video game movie", I do not mean movies that were adapted from video games. Oh, no.
Speak-Up on Kotaku triumphantly returns this week, with Celery, Sollipse, Taggart6, and DomesticGoddess2010 sharing…
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