![]() ![]() ![]() Of course the puzzle designs aren’t quite as tight or refined as we see in the Mario RPGs either. You navigate around by flipping switches, freezing blocks of water, and jumping across platforms in exactly the same way that you would expect Mario & Co do in their own games, and so you never get to enjoy the sensation that you’re playing as a bunch of tiny bugs. Unfortunately, much of this potential is squandered because the world design, puzzles, and traps all look and behave in exactly the same way as they do in a Mario title. After all, small bugs have a very different view on the world than humans do, and that different perspective could have been used to all kinds of creative ends, given that even the most mundane things to us adult humans surely seem big and terrifying to the little bugs. It’s an appealing set-up and it has plenty of potential. Rather than control Mario and other the denizens of the Mushroom Kingdom universe, in Bug Fables, you command colourful and energetic bees, ants, and bugs. Related reading: Our review of the most recent Paper Mario RPG – Color Splash on the Wii U. ![]()
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