Our rotation of good minigames includes Avalanche, where you jump down platforms to avoid a snowy death Plinko Panic, where you jump around in the bottom of a pachinko machine and Spike Scramble, which is similar to The Wall, where you’ll have to compete for the limited gaps within spiked barriers. Almost all of them are worth trying once, and some are killer. There are 33 games here, so there’s no skimping, particularly being something of a budget title in comparison to Mario Party. I don’t think there’s ever been a party game that’s managed to have anything more than a 70/30 hit-rate on the minigames it’s included, but I would say that Party Panic falls shorter than most. I appreciate that this section is less a ‘drunk with mates’ good time, and better suited to families – we loved it.įor many, the meat and potatoes of a party game are the minigames, the game boards, and the opportunities to lord it over your mates from the top of the podium. It’s a playbox, and you’ll be collaborating on what ramp or building will be needed to get them. Collectibles are on the buildings, and hoops linger in the sky, begging you to jump/fly/drive through. Then you move further out from these arenas and come across a town. You’ll wander from the starting castle into arenas made for emergent gaming – there’s one where the floor-is-lava, while another has platforms that drop away. This is an open sandbox of stuff, sticky-tacked together for large groups to explore. ![]() Luckily, fun is in supply in the Adventure Mode.
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