![]() The idea here is presumably to ensure that the tournament mode remains heavily populated, even if a healthy percentage of players are Lite version owners. To facilitate this massive mode, Square Enix is releasing Chocobo GP in two versions: a full £40 / $50 game, and a free ‘Lite’ version which contains a couple of characters and access to the online tournament mode. Players take part in a series of 8-player races, with the top four in each race moving through to the next round, until a winner is eventually crowned in the final race. ![]() The latter is the most exciting because it’s essentially a huge online tournament supporting up to 64 players. But on Nintendo Switch, the fact is that a kart racing game remains the console’s highest seller to date, and in the wider history of video games, it’s a kart racing series that for three decades has provided some of the greatest multiplayer moments ever. Here we have another racing game receiving a higher score, but one that has totally different goals, for a totally different audience, on a totally different platform.Īnd on top of that, it’s in a sub-genre that is often looked down upon by purists. It’s a stance that feels particularly relevant for this review of Chocobo GP, coming as it does – through nothing other than sheer coincidence – a day after our three-star Gran Turismo 7 review. ![]() He wrote: “It’s unsportsmanlike to penalise a meal for not being a sea bream fillet with citrus fruit, peppers, and caramelised ventrèche when it is plainly a hot dog with mustard.” “Yes, really: four stars.” That’s how Matt Zoller Seitz’s review of Jackass Forever on begins, seemingly anticipating the seas of raised eyebrows that awaited him for daring to suggest that such a ‘lowbrow’ movie deserved a high rating.
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