
The kind that have a just SPECIFIC way to beat the level, and if you don’t know what that is, like perhaps pressing a certain combo of switches for instance, you won’t proceed. Some of the levels, particularly in World 6 of Story Mode are absolutely dreadful. I forgot how much I hate some Super Monkey Ball 2 levels. As long as you have perseverance, you will beat these levels. This is more of a thing because lives and a life count are gone. There’s even challenges to do those stages all in a row without dying too much.

Challenge Mode holds all of the old stages as you remember, held right in their respective modes. Story Mode holds 2’s story, cutscenes and all, though the cutscenes are remade to be much more budgeted. This for me is a great way to push replaying the stages or trying your best. Do them fast, get a certain number of bananas, get those extra hard Green or Red doors. Get Them BananasĮvery stage has their own challenges. If you’re wanting more, then Banana Mania goes absolutely bananas with it. Ok, so sure, just playing the old stages again is just fine and dandy, maybe that’s all you want and want it on a modern, HD console. Stages from 1, 2, and Deluxe, with a bit of a spruced up story mode from 2. Characters from the entire series, even the weird spinoffs like Step and Roll and the unfortunately obscure 3D. A remake that actually feels more like a celebration of the entire series as opposed to just retreading the ground that Deluxe walked. That’s right, not a remaster, but a remake. Sega seemed to have gotten the hint and nostalgia is the big thing, leading to Super Monkey Ball Banana Mania, a remake of the first two games. I wouldn’t say games after those two were bad per say, but I’d be inclined to agree. The music classes are optimistic and engaging each stage you complete leads to a rich song with full of recognizable melodies at the end of each world.To majority of the fans of the series, the first two Super Monkey Ball games were the peak of the series.

The image of this Super Monkey Ball Step & Roll is vivid, colorful, and the animation is smooth, exaggerated based on the solid image change from the previous part. In addition to the main game, there are 21 exciting mini-multiplayer games, including pinball, skiing, skipping, luge, skydiving, and more.

The game is an interesting rolling ball design with a series of beautiful challenges. You will play the same level with the remote control board or balance board as in co-op mode, and the only difference is the number of obstacles. Along the way, you can collect bananas for more lives. Each world divides into ten levels, two of which are reward rounds. You have a monkey in a ball, and it’s your job to reach the target for a limited time by tilting the ball and managing the monkey’s motivation.

Super Monkey Ball Step & Roll is the first game in the Wii franchise, with 70 levels divided into many themed worlds.
