The sound isn’t anything exceptional either. Yet, while all these little graphical touches augment the game nicely, in the end the focus of the game rests solely on the Tetris blocks and the playing field, which are the same blocks we’ve been seeing for the last decade. Details include seals flopping across the tundra, or a “Minos” coming up now and then to watch you play. Tetris Worlds features some neat little details to augment its nicely rendered backgrounds. Graphically, there just isn’t much that can be done with a Tetris game. At the end of the day, most players will opt to just play the original Tetris mode time and time again. Unfortunately, aside from Cascade and Hot Line, which feature interesting quirks on the basic premise of the game, these variations just aren’t compelling enough to merit playing more than once or twice to satisfy one’s curiosity. All the modes of play from the GC version of Tetris Worlds are featured in this game. This latest version of the granddaddy of all puzzlers features several new modes of play on top of the classic Tetris game. Every “true” upgrade to the Game Boy has had an incarnation of the infamous Tetris, from the original Game Boy version that became massively popular worldwide with gamers and non-gamers alike, to THQ’s and 3d6 Games’ recently released Tetris Worlds for the GBA.
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