A new wave of gameplay is now available for Savage Age. This week, the adventure puzzle experience dropped on Switch.
You can catch up on everything you need to know in the following overview:
We have the latest Nintendo maintenance schedule for the week of April 7, 2024. Not only Switch, but also 3DS and Wii U will be impacted – tying in with the shutdown of online play for those two older platforms.
Here’s the Nintendo maintenance schedule for the week of April 7, 2024:
The Gap, a psychological thriller and exploration puzzle title, has received an official launch trailer. Crunching Koalas and Label This are celebrating the debut of the Switch version.
A bunch of information about it can be found in the following overview:
Gameplay has come in for PuzzMiX, the newest title from Inti Creates. It was not only announced this week, but came out just a day later.
For those that missed our recent coverage, check out the following overview:
LemonChili Soft has announced Super Farming Boy, an action puzzle farming sim with chain reactions and combos. The project is in development for Switch and other platforms.
LemonChili tells us that their new game is like Harvest Moon on steroids. You’ll actually be able to play with controllers and touch at the same time.
We’ve got lots more on it in the following overview:
Listings on the eShops provide file sizes for a bunch of Switch games. These include Class of Heroes 1 & 2, SaGa Emerald Beyond, and more.
Here’s the full roundup:
Ever since their original release, amiibo figures have been more popular as fancy little shelfwarmers than in-game content bonuses. Nintendo certainly acknowledges this, too – whereas characters like Mario work across multiple games, other, more specific characters only serve a single purpose. Today, we’re looking at the most useless amiibo ever released and what they do in their corresponding game. Do note, there are several Super Smash Bros. series amiibo whose only purpose is amiibo training. This compatibility is actually too useful for our purposes, so we’ll only be talking about useless amiibo that do even less than that.
When Square Enix announced Visions of Mana at the end of last year, some were surprised that a Switch version was nowhere to be seen. For one thing, the series itself started out on Nintendo platforms. We’ve also seen Collection of Mana as a Switch exclusive while Trials of Mana came out a few years ago as well.
In an interview with RPG Site, series producer Masaru Oyamada commented on the situation. Here’s what he had to say when asked why Switch isn’t a part of the plan this time around: