Cubed3 Nintendo gaming, Wii and DS

Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball Wii Nintendo Review

Posted by By (Phoenom) 4 Number of reads 3793 Posted
Review for Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on Wii - on Nintendo Wii U, 3DS games review

On paper, it sounds like the most brilliant concept since sliced bread. A sport that is ideally suited yet horribly under-represented in videogame-dom, and one of the most popular (and ultimately undecided) internet memes, mashed onto one budget-priced disc for the best selling console on the market. Question is, how does this one-time Xbox Live Arcade title fare in the big bad world of retail?

Given its download origins, and the image of basic cutesy characters that seem to invade every shelf-hogging coughed-out game, first impressions of anyone seeing this one in action would be understandably negative, despite the premise. Yet, Pirates Vs Ninjas manages to cover the basics, without taking any major steps to entertain and innovate.

PvN's presentation is rather basic. No FMV cutscenes or amazing graphical touches here - just a standard start-up loading screen and the menus beyond it. The main menu presents the choices of single player, multiplayer and options. Clicking single player brings you to the real meat of the game, with modes including exhibition, where you can face off against the computer in two distinct match types; story, allowing you to play through the plotlines of the seven main teams in the game; challenges, 10 succinct and diverse situations for you to conquer; and finally, a basic but helpful tutorial mode.

In all modes, you can choose to play a game with regular dodgeball rules, or the slightly different dodgebrawl mode. Dodgeball merely involves you on a team of up to three characters battling against another team. Unlike the real deal, one hit with a ball does not equal elimination, as each individual team member has their own health meter, and a stamina bar that drops with powerful throws, slowing characters down when it has reached a sufficiently low level. Dodgebrawl is largely the same, although when not in possession of a dodgeball characters can attack their opponents with a melee 3-hit combo, stunning them if they are successful. Similarly, they can also deflect balls thrown at them. Both modes work really well, although things can get rather hectic and confusing with more than one ball on the field; it's more akin to Smash Bros.' craziness than something like Viewtiful Joe: Red Hot Rumble's headache, so it's adaptable. Thankfully, the button and action layout are rarely a hindrance either.

Screenshot for Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on Wii - on Nintendo Wii U, 3DS games review

Developer Blazing Lizard has managed a respectable mapping of controls to the Wii remote and nunchuk. Your main action would be to shake the remote to throw the ball, which never feels like mindless waggling in all but the most chaotic of situations; it feels more like the spin in Super Mario Galaxy than anything else. Using this in conjunction with different situations and character positions gives the option of different types of throws, such as homing throws, or power throws. The A button is the main jump button, although you will find that this is used rarely, except as part of advance throws. B allows you to catch a throw aimed at you, pass to a teammate, or request a pass from one, so it'll probably become your most used button. The d-pad can be used to dodge roll; holding the Z trigger on the nunchuk and moving the analogue stick produces the same result, so it's down to preference. Finally, the C button handles on-the-fly teammate switching, so you're not always stuck with one character. There isn't a classic or GC pad option here, and there's only one control scheme unlike previously promised, but it's a fine one.

Story mode is where the real chunk of time will be spent, and thankfully the basic nature of the game has not gotten in the way too much here. Initially only the stories of pirates and the ninja Miyamoto Clan teams are selectable, although successful completion unlocks the paths of the other five: zombies, aliens, monsters, robots, and guest stars the Mushroom Men, from Red Fly's Wii and DS game of the same name. Each of these other teams are well designed, but not distinct enough in terms of ability or attribute, so they all largely feel the same to play with. Each team's story typically lasts around eight or nine matches, and small unobtrusive speech segments separate these games. None of these have voice acting but do feature some impressively witty and interesting writing about them, plus they help the somewhat limited plotline trudge along. There isn't a great deal of variety in story mode, as all you're doing is playing dodgeball with different characters and rules. However, players will encounter steep difficulty curves at times, so it will take a while to play through all seven scenarios; depending on the rules you set or the part of story mode you're at, you can find yourself in for one heck of a battle. At times, the computer's A.I is almost unfairly barbaric, so this game will satisfy those after a decent challenge. At the expense of their hair.

Pirates vs. Ninjas provides 8 arenas for players to battle on, but aside from object placement, surrounding theme design and the catchy music tracks, they're all relatively similar. There are many rules to fiddle about with, including adjustable difficulty, number of rounds for that longer play session, and a 'Hot Potato' function that turns all of the balls into fiery weapons of death. The challenges will also eat up your time, as they are relatively difficult to pass, and playing either dodgeball or dodgebrawl with friends is good clean fun. For the price, Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball provides a moderate amount of entertainment; just without any 'wow' or unexpected moments.

Screenshot for Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on Wii - on Nintendo Wii U, 3DS games review

Gameplay

Main mode dodgeball and its variant dodgebrawl are both good fun, easy to control and difficult to master. Story is fairly slim but beefed up with some clever script work, and a diverse range of characters and teams keeps players going.

Graphics

Very basic big-head style reminiscent of many low-budgets games, with varied but ultimately near-identical arenas. No slowdown or frame rate hiccups keeps the action going smoothly.

Sound

No voice acting for story scenes, and only a handful of different tracks. The thud of a dodgeball hitting someone's noggin sounds just right, as do the arrrrs and zombie groans associated with each team's characteristics.

Value

Challenges, multiplayer and a lengthy story mode will last players a fair while, although without a rule change every now and then multiplayer and regular matches begin to get tedious.

Cubed3 Rating

6/10
Rated 6 out of 10

Average

About this score

Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball plugs a gap in videogaming's sports selection, and provides a fun, if sparse, game in the process. The download origins of this game are immediately apparent, but excused by some clever writing and fun controls, with a good amount of variety in tasks and features. It's a wonder Nintendo still haven't green lighted a Mario dodgeball game.

Read and post comments

 Buy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball (Wii) Buy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball (Wii)

Buy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on AmazonBuy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on Shop To Buy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on GameBuy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on TescoBuy Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball on The Hut

Share this Review Share this Review

Games you may also like...

Developer

Blazing Lizard

Publisher

Gamecock

Genre

Sport

Players

2

C3 Score

Rated $score out of 10  6/10

Reader Score

Rated $score out of 10  0 (0 Votes)

European release date Out now   North America release date Out now   Japan release date None   Australian release date None   

Follow this Game Follow Pirates vs. Ninjas Dodgeball (Wii)

If you are a registered member and logged in, you can also subscribe to topics by email.

Reader comments - add yours today Comments on this Review

Cubed3 Member

Have to disagree with you on the framerates - playing dodgeball on the snow level has huge slowdown when everyone is running around.

Staff Member

Really? I never noticed that. Sure your Wii doesn't need a clean? Smilie

Click here for awesomeness.
Cubed3 Member

NINJA's ane ninjay pirates are ugh


John:
I..I can't watch porn. My Mommy finds out
:}

Comment on this review

You can comment as a guest or join the Cubed3 community below: Sign Up for Free Account Login

Preview PostPreview Post Your Name:
Validate your comment
  Enter the letters in the image to validate your comment.
Submit Post

Subscribe to this topic Subscribe to this topic

If you are a registered member and logged in, you can also subscribe to topics by email.

Follow this topic Follow this topic

Keep up with new comments with the RSS feed for this topic, or subscribe via email above.
Nintendo E3 Wii U, 3DS Coverage Turqoise Radio - Cubed3's Glass to the Wall
Sign up today for blogs, games collections, reader reviews and much more
Latest news and updatesSite Feed
Vote on our latest community pollNintendo Poll
Vote: Which of these Wii U E3 games excite you the most?
Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag
Batman Arkham Origins
Bayonetta 2
Cloudberry Kingdom
Deus Ex: Human Revolution
Disney Infinity
Disney's Planes
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze
DuckTales Remastered
Just Dance 2014
Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker HD
Mario & Sonic at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games
Mario Kart 8
Mutant Muds Deluxe
New Super Luigi U
Oddworld: New 'n' Tasty
Pikmin 3
Rayman Legends
Scram Kitty and His Buddy on Rails
Shovel Knight
Sonic Lost World
Splinter Cell Blacklist
Super Mario 3D World
Super Smash Bros.
The Wonderful 101
Wii Party U
X (Monolith Soft)
Member of the weekMember of the Week
This week's top member is JayUK, awarded the most stars for great posts.
Online Play and ChatOnline Nintendo Play & Chat
General Chatroom: Click here to chat Wii U Nintendo Network Codes - Find other Nintendo Wii U users 3DS Nintendo Network Codes - Find other Nintendo 3DS users
Listen to our Nintendo Jukebox - Classic Mario, Zelda, Metroid songs and more Nintendo news and reviews on the move