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        <pubDate>2026-04-06 19:02:59</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[September 1, 2016 Nintendo Direct Recap]]></title>
                <link>https://novogamer.com/articles/september-1-2016-nintendo-direct-recap-ZKQmwl96m8</link>
                <description><![CDATA[<p>It's been five months since Nintendo's last Direct and not much has been revealed in the time since. Did Nintendo show off some neat or groundbreaking stuff in their presentation? Well let's rewatch the video below.</p><iframe style="width: 500px; height: 281px;" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/IpXQtFbRChg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""></iframe><p>The video is centered almost entirely around the 3DS, but like always here's the short recap for you folks out there that don't have the time to watch the whole thing.</p><ul><li>Two things were revealed in <strong>Pokemon Sun & Moon</strong>; Alolan Rattata being one and a special Munchlax as an early purchase bonus being the other.</li><li>A slightly watered down version of <strong>Super Mario Maker</strong> is being ported to the 3DS that lacks the costume mushroom and the ability to upload stages you made to the internet, but you can make collaborative stages with other people and complete special challenges in the pre-installed stages. It is set to be released on December 2.</li><li>Some more info was shown off for <strong>Mario Party: Star Rush</strong>. It is stated to have 7 game modes, three of which are entirely different board game each with their own unique rules. The game will be released along side the second wave of Mario series amiibo on November 4.</li><li><strong>Animal Crossing New Leaf</strong> was stated to be getting a major update after being out for 3 years. This update will add amiibo functionality to the game and 50 new amiibo cards will be released along side it. In addition to this, a special version of the game, called <strong>Animal Crossing: New Leaf Welcome amiibo</strong> will also be released this holiday season that will include the update on the cart.</li><li>The 3DS's Mii Plaza was given a new update which adds 5 new games (1 free plus $2.99 for each after or $8.99 for the full bundle), a special quick-start plaza, and a new queue for Mii's encountered via streetpass which bumps the total from 10 to a whopping 100. This update is available now.</li><li>A new eShop exclusive title called <strong>Tank Troopers</strong> was revealed to be in the works which would have up to 6-player versus and customizable tanks where the abilities change depending on who's manning the vehicle. No release date was shown at the time of writing this article.</li><li><strong>Picross 3D: Round 2</strong> was also shown for the eShop and was launched following the Direct.</li><li>The Nindies Summer Jam started on the same day the Direct aired and revealed that 5 anticipated indie titles would be released over the course of 5 weeks with <strong>Axiom Verge</strong> being the first game on that list followed by <strong>Jotun</strong>, <strong>Noitu Love: Devolution</strong>, <strong>Severed</strong>, and <strong>Azure Striker Gunvolt 2</strong>.</li><li>To celebrate The Legend of Zelda's 30th anniversary, four new amiibo were announced being 8-bit Link, Ocarina of Time Link, and a 2-pack that has Toon Link and Toon Zelda. They will all be compatible with <strong>Zelda: Breath of the Wild</strong>.</li><li>Nintendo also teamed up with Darkhorse to make three new Zelda books with the first being an artwork collection with over 2,000 images spanning the 30 year history of the franchise. The first book is also available to pre-order.</li><li><strong>Zelda: Skyward Sword</strong> was also released on the Wii U eShop.</li><li>The New 3DS XL now has a new galaxy themed color and the regular New 3DS has a new Mario themed bundle that comes with <strong>Super Mario 3D Land</strong> and two sets of Mario themed faceplates.</li><li><strong>Hyrule Warriors Legends</strong> showed off a new weapon for Toon Link being the Sand Wand and a new playable character being Toon Zelda among other things like a new adventure map based on <strong>Phantom Hourglass</strong>.</li><li><strong>Phoenix Wright: Spirit of Justice</strong> got a release date of September 8 exclusively for the 3DS eShop.</li><li><strong>Dragon Quest VII</strong> for the 3DS release date was revealed as well being September 16.</li><li><strong>Yo-Kai Watch 2: Bony Spirits/Fleshy Souls</strong> showed off some new gameplay elements and a special bonus medal for those that buy the game physically. They will both launch September 30.</li><li><strong>Disney Magical World 2</strong> was also shown off with some Nintendo 3DS themes based around it being shown as well.</li><li><strong>Sonic Boom: Fire & Ice</strong> for the 3DS finally got an official release date being September 27 with a special launch edition which also includes a DVD containing 3 episodes of the TV that it's based on.</li><li><strong>Shin Megami Tensei IV Apocalypse</strong> for the 3DS got a release date being September 20.</li><li>A special version of <strong>Yoshi's Woolly World</strong> is being ported to the 3DS that will include a bunch of new stages where you play as Poochy and 30 stop-motion shorts featuring the two. <strong>Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World</strong> will be released February 3, 2017 along side the new Yarn Poochy amiibo.</li><li>The new IP <strong>Ever Oasis</strong> had some gameplay shown off and will be released for the 3DS some time in 2017.</li><li><strong>Mario Sports Super Stars</strong> for the 3DS was revealed and was shown to include 5 different sports being Soccer, Tennis, Golf, Baseball, and of all things Horseback Riding. It will also have the ability to be played online or in local multiplayer. It will release some time in Spring of 2017.</li><li>In a big surprise, it turns out that the <strong>Pikmin</strong> series is getting a 2D spin-off game on the 3DS. Judging by the gameplay shown, it looks like it might play similar to <strong>Kirby: Mass Attack</strong>. No official release date was revealed, but it is scheduled for 2017.</li></ul><p>Well that's all of it. Out of all these, I'm probably most excited for the <strong>Pikmin</strong> spin-off, but only time will tell if it is any good. But until then, I'll be seeing you.</p>]]></description>
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                <guid>ZKQmwl96m8</guid>
                <pubDate>Fri, 02 Sep 2016 08:09:00 +0000</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[November 2, 2016 Nintendo Direct Recap]]></title>
                <link>https://novogamer.com/articles/november-2-2016-nintendo-direct-recap-ZZQBwez8LA</link>
                <description><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: justify;">It's been nearly 4 years, but the wait is finally over; <strong>Animal Crossing: New Leaf</strong> finally got an update, and boy is it a big one. Everyone knew that the update would include amiibo functionality, but I don't think anyone would have expected all of the other features that were shown off in the video below.</p><p style="text-align: justify;"><iframe width="500" height="281" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/5Bk3dAR0M68" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""></iframe><br></p><p style="text-align: justify;">Now the amiibo features that everyone knew about were kind of obvious. You would scan an Animal Crossing amiibo card and you would get a temporary villager that you could persuade to move into your town. But there was a lot more added beyond that that actually would want old players to come back in full force. Here is a quick recap of the features that were shown off in the Direct.</p><ul><li>A new room can now be added to your house that you can access at any time and can be used to contact Wisp who will allow you to scan your amiibo of choice. This room can also be decorated in the same fashion as how you can in <strong>Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer</strong>. In addition, if you have save data from <strong>Happy Home Designer</strong>, you can now order extra large furniture from your catalog.</li><li>An expanded campground site for RV's (run by a new character named Harvey) was added to allow new villagers to visit. 50 new amiibo cards will be produced featuring characters with these new RV's and will also allow exclusive special villagers and furniture based around <strong>Splatoon</strong> and <strong>The Legend of Zelda</strong>.</li><li>Two new minigames were added being Desert Island Escape which was first included in <strong>Animal Crossing: amiibo Festival</strong> and Animal Crossing Puzzle League which is better known as <strong>Tetris Attack</strong> to fans of the classic game. These games can be respectively accessed from the new Wii U and 3DS furniture items.</li><li>Daily missions are now added to your Town Pass Card that, when completed, will give you a new form of currency called MEOW Coupons (Mutual Exchange Of Wealth) which you receive from the new CAT Machine (Coupon Allocating Terminal) which then can be exchanged for brand new furniture and goods that cannot be bought at the shops.</li><li>An amiibo Camera feature was added that will allow you to take pictures with animated versions of the amiibo figures that you can scan in.</li><li>And finally, if you wish to start over from scratch, there is a brand new feature where you can now sell your town to Tom Nook and start a new game with the profits already in your bank.</li></ul><p style="text-align: justify;">With all of these features added in the new update, which is now live by the way, it makes the game feel fresh and new again. I for one will likely be playing New Leaf even more now and I hope that if you have the game, you would download it as well. But until then, I'll be seeing you.</p>]]></description>
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                <author><![CDATA[Archive]]></author>
                <guid>ZZQBwez8LA</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 03 Nov 2016 11:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[My Bottom 10 Nintendo Franchise Games]]></title>
                <link>https://novogamer.com/articles/my-bottom-10-nintendo-franchise-games-ZkQKwVdQ16</link>
                <description><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: justify;">Hello again, friend of a friend, I knew you when our common goal was waiting for the world to end, but since that isn't going to be happening any time soon I might as well settle for what is pretty much the end of the world in my book: Bad Nintendo franchise games. Nintendo usually has a fantastic track record when it comes to enjoyable video games, but once in a blue moon for some unknown reason, a game of questionable quality will slip through the cracks and grace the world with its unfortunate existence. So I figured since it is Halloween, I figured <em>'tis the season</em> and I would list off ten games that were made by Nintendo or one of their subsidiaries that I don't particularly enjoy all that much, because for a gamer, what's truly scarier than a poorly made game?</p><p style="text-align: center;"><strong>(<strong>Please keep in mind that my opinions may or may not reflect your own, this list is entirely biased.</strong>)</strong><br></p><h2>Yoshi Topsy Turvy (Game Boy Advance)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" style="float: right; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">While I like a fair majority of the games in the Yoshi series, I'm not entirely sure what was going through their collective minds when they developed this abysmal game. There are times in the game where it hardly ever feels like an entry in the Yoshi's Island series and those spirits that give you missions to do in order to up the difficulty don't even feel like they were meant for a Yoshi game in the first place. In addition, the gyroscopic controls are stiff and unresponsive; the motion sensors in Warioware Twisted were of much better quality and that game came out before this one. Luckily they haven't made a sequel to this drek so they must have taken notice of its poor design choices.</p><h2>Animal Crossing: amiibo Festival (Wii U)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="371" height="215" style="float: right; width: 371px; height: 215px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">An unusual board-game spin off of the Animal Crossing series, but I honestly think it should've been left on the drawing board. It is a retail game that downright REQUIRES the use of amiibo to play effectively, you only get one randomly chosen board to play on and you can't get a new one without erasing your progress, the minigames (which require the amiibo cards) are non-existent through normal play and can only be accessed from the plaza, and online play doesn't exist which would've helped a game like this even if it wasn't by much. If you still want to get it I can't stop you, but just to warn you I actually got so bored playing this game that I almost fell asleep.</p><h2>The Legend of Zelda: Tri Force Heroes (3DS)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="354" height="220" style="float: right; width: 354px; height: 220px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">As you all know, I love The Legend of Zelda series and will often go out of my way to get anything Zelda related, but when I got this entry in the series, I feel like maybe this game might have been nothing more than one expensive experiment. This game seems to focus mostly on co-operative battles and player interaction over puzzle solving which completely misses the point of the series. Plus this game is damn near impossible when playing solo and since its online multiplayer is region locked, finding anyone who will play with me is a challenge in and of itself since I usually only have time to play late at night. That, and the unnecessary inclusion of the "doge" meme, made this a rather unpleasurable experience overall.</p><h2>Paper Mario: Sticker Star (3DS)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="350" height="210" style="float: right; width: 350px; height: 210px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">Compared to its successor, Paper Mario: Color Splash, this game was an absolute snore. The dialog was uninteresting and bland and Bowser didn't have a single speaking role throughout the entire ordeal, the worlds were uninspired and just rehashed ideas that had been used in past entries in the main series Mario games, and everything done when in battle were only through the use of consumable items and fights yielded no experience of any kind. I actually got so tired of this game's shenanigans that I basically just did a speed run of everything after the halfway point. Overall, this game was such a disappointment to experience.</p><h2>Metroid: Other M (Wii)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="389" height="219" style="float: right; width: 389px; height: 219px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">Metroid has been one of those series that I enjoyed just about as much as The Legend of Zelda and I was quite excited for Other M when it was originally announced, but after playing it again recently, it left such a sour taste in my mouth. First of all Samus's official height in every other entry in the series is 6'3" where as she's around 5'9" in Other M. While not too much of an issue on its own, when I found out that the devs shrank her so she specifically was shorter than Adam, her old commanding officer, I saw that as a stupid and petty design choice that demeans her as a strong female character. And while the gameplay isn't too bad, I think I can pretty much sum up all the problems this game has in one quote directly from the game...</p><blockquote style="text-align: right;">"Samus, activate the Varia feature on your suit to protect yourself from heat damage."<br>- Adam Malkovich, roughly 20 minutes after entering the sector that requires the Varia Suit</blockquote><h2>Pokemon Dash (DS)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="185" height="278" style="float: right; width: 185px; height: 278px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">This game baffled me. It was a foot racing game where the only playable character was Pikachu, and you played by repeatedly swiping the screen in the direction that you want to go. If this game was released for iOS or Android devices for free, people would thing nothing of it, but since this was a retail game on the DS that got very stale and repetitive VERY quickly due to there being only one playable character, there was no reason to keep playing after you beat the first grand prix. Once you've played one map, you've pretty much played them all. Not even the ability to make new maps from the GBA slot could save this one.</p><h2>Kirby Squeak Squad (DS)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" style="float: right; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">As far as the Kirby series has gone, I've had pretty much no complaints with any game that has been released in this series so far, barring this particular one. Despite the baffling story to the game where it revolves around Kirby trying to recover a stolen slice of cake, it plays pretty much like what you would expect from a Kirby game, but compared to the other games in the series, this game is far too easy, even by Kirby standards. Plus some of the sound effects sound a bit off with the sword being the biggest offender having this horrendously high-pitched ding happen whenever you perform a combo attack. While this is a decent first game for newcomers to the series, this is in my opinion the weakest in the series due to its unchallenging gameplay (by Kirby standards) which ultimately renders this game forgettable to me.</p><h2>Alleyway (Game Boy)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="243" height="219" style="float: right; width: 243px; height: 219px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">An attempt at making a Breakout clone with heavy emphasis on "attempt." Unlike Arkanoid, a much better Breakout clone which had been out on NES earlier, this game had no power-ups or enemies to destroy and extremely limited options for gameplay alterations. The stage progression was also very predictable and the difficulty was unfair for what type of game it was. I suggest if you want a good Breakout clone on the Game Boy, just play Kirby's Blockball. It is so much more unique and a helluva lot more fun.</p><h2>Wii Fit series (Wii, Wii U)</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="420" height="238" style="float: right; width: 420px; height: 238px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">I feel that a good number of us gamers can probably agree that fun and exercise can mix well when its done right, but one thing I can guarantee is complete and utter bullcrap is Nintendo's attempt at making a fun fitness game. Personal fitness is not a game, nor should it be treated like one. While I agree that if you want to get back into shape that you need to find your own personal workout regimen that works for you with some fitness games sometimes falling under this category, this "game" series is pretty much just torture and insulting to anyone that wants to lose weight or improve their health. The way this game uses your ideal BMI as an "endgame goal" is an absolute joke and it doesn't even take into consideration skeletal build or total muscle mass. You need to have an accurate measurement of all three, otherwise its just a demeaning experience. The fitness games on XBox Kinect look more fun and effective than this.</p><h2>The Virtual Boy</h2><p><img src="https://novogamer.com/images/archive-broken-image.png" alt="" width="292" height="393" style="float: right; width: 292px; height: 393px; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;"></p><p style="text-align: justify;">And the pi√®ce de r√©sistance, the one thing that <em>almost</em> made me completely lose faith in Nintendo's ability to make a fun gaming console: The Virtual Boy. This red and black monstrosity had an astoundingly short lived run and had a library of games that barely exceeded 20 titles in all regions combined. But how could that be? I'll just cut to the chase and tell you that it was the godawful screen colors when you looked into the apertures of the device. On a monochrome screen, you should never EVER use a display color scheme that can induce headaches even after short periods of play. It's just a shame that none of the good games that were released on this thing ever got ported to a later system in Nintendo's repertoire of systems. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">Being a hardcore Nintendo fan, these stains and marks on Nintendo's image physically hurt me as I know that they are capable of doing so much better. But I also know that they are only human and they likely learned a lot from making mistakes like these. They took features from Animal Crossing: amiibo Festival and just added them to New Leaf as an update, they built upon Paper Mario: Sticker Star and made a somewhat better entry as Color Splash, and after the failure of the Virtual Boy, they didn't experiment with 3D imagery again until the 3DS. Hopefully Nintendo won't continue make any mistakes this bad in the near future, but until then, I'll be seeing you.</p><h2></h2>]]></description>
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                <guid>ZkQKwVdQ16</guid>
                <pubDate>Tue, 31 Oct 2017 11:47:00 +0000</pubDate>
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