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Don’t Forget Kirby And The Rainbow Curse Is Out In The US Tomorrow

From having Kirby ride on hamsters to turning him into yarn, Kirby games have always experimented with inventive visual styles and unique game play. Launching for the Wii U console on Feb. 20, the visually striking new adventure Kirby and the Rainbow Curse finds players controlling Kirby exclusively using the touch screen on the Wii U GamePad controller in a world made of clay. By drawing lines on the touch screen with the stylus, the player creates Rainbow Ropes that will help Kirby navigate obstacles and defeat enemies. Three friends can hop in and out at any time using Wii Remote controllers to play as Waddle Dees and assist Kirby, and players can even use compatible amiibo figures once a day, per stage, to power up Kirby with special abilities.

“Kirby and the Rainbow Curse kicks off another absolutely stellar lineup of Wii U games for this year,” said Scott Moffitt, Nintendo of America’s executive vice president of Sales & Marketing. “In the first half of the year alone, Wii U owners will be able to adventure with Kirby, party down with Mario and his friends in Mario Party 10, build levels in the Nintendo eShop-exclusive Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars and experience Nintendo’s newest IP with the action-packed Splatoon.”

Unlike other games in the Kirby series, Kirby and the Rainbow Curse is set in a beautiful “clay-ful” world. The controls are also easy to pick up for all types of players, since the game is played exclusively on the touch screen of the Wii U GamePad. The Rainbow Ropes will guide Kirby in the direction players want him to go, and drawing ropes in creative ways like a loop will even give Kirby a quick speed boost. Strategy not only comes into play in guiding Kirby, but also in the amount of Rainbow Ink used, as drawing Rainbow Ropes uses precious ink. By staying on the ground or collecting an ink bottle, players can refill the Rainbow Ink quickly. In addition to moving Kirby around, Rainbow Ropes can be cleverly used to solve environmental puzzles. Using a well-drawn rope can block a waterfall or uncover hidden areas.

Instead of his traditional copy abilities, Kirby can transform into powerful vehicles. As a tank, Kirby will move automatically and players must tap on the GamePad touch screen to shoot at approaching enemies. When traveling through the depths as a submarine, Kirby will move to the spot players tap on the touch screen. And as a rocket, drawing Rainbow Ropes will help navigate him to the goal.

Anyone that wants to experience Kirby and the Rainbow Curse with friends or family members is in luck! Up to three additional players can join the adventure at any time. As the player who controls Kirby draws Rainbow Ropes and taps the GamePad, other players use Wii Remote controllers (sold separately) to play as friendly Waddle Dee characters to assist Kirby and help discover the game’s numerous collectibles. While ultimately everyone works together to reach the goal, each player’s collected stars will display at the end of each stage, encouraging a little friendly competition.

Kirby, King Dedede or Meta Knight amiibo can each be used once a day to power up Kirby with special abilities. By tapping a Kirby amiibo to the Wii U GamePad, players receive an unlimited Star Dash within a stage, which usually can only be activated by collecting 100 stars. A King Dedede amiibo outfits Kirby with a hat that grants him six health bars instead of the normal four. And the Meta Knight amiibo gives Kirby a mask that lets him use a fast dash that blasts right through weaker enemies.

Kirby and the Rainbow Curse launches for Wii U on Feb. 20 at a suggested retail price of $39.99. The game will also be available for purchase in the Nintendo eShop and at Nintendo.com.

 

 

32 thoughts on “Don’t Forget Kirby And The Rainbow Curse Is Out In The US Tomorrow”

      1. Wii U has no games COMPARED to PS4 and X11 dumbass.

        Oh wait, all third party, Sony, and MS games suck anyway right? Predictable reponses are predictable

        1. No, PS4 and Xbox One(Mainly Xbox One, PS4 to a much lesser extent) rely mainly on third party support. Wii U relies mainly on First and Second Party support…

          1. My point still stands, if Nintendo even bothered to court third parties to Wii U things will be looking much more difference in sales for wii u

        2. So if PS4 has more games than Wii U why is only GTA5 and AC still top 5 after 3 months? If so if hardly any new titles on PS4 debuted since 3 months ago. Those 1st 100,000 people getting GTA and AC don’t have nothing new to play. If they did then why isn’t an all new PS4 title top 5? Even DKTF was top 5 and Pikmin 3 and Undercover before.

          1. Evolve, Dying Light, and Telltale’s Game of Thrones are all selling pretty well, from what I’ve heard.
            Then there’s games like Kingdom Hearts 2.5, Grim Fandango, and Resident Evil 1 HD, that have come out in the last month for ps4.

            So- I mean- the ps4 has had (roughly) 6 successful/ well reviewed games in the last month or so. The Wii U has only had 1- Shantae. The PS4 has had a much more impressive 2015 start than the Wii U.

    1. Nintendo Lieutenant Cereza

      Where da Angry eyes at Silph? You promised me every year I get an angry eyes Kirby as a bonus for being a US citizen.

  1. Yeah I’m lining up at best buy tomorrow morning, in hopes to get meta knight and King dedede, along with kirby game.

    Game obviously will not be hard to come by, but amiibo….

    1. I know right, this is the first wii u nintendo made game of the year, even though it’s a budget game I’m still really excited!

  2. And it’s my Brother’s birthday tomorrow as well. He’s turning 24 and he’s a huge Mario Kart and Tekken fan…

  3. I don’t plan on buying this. I can’t get pass the fact everything is controlled using stylist on a controller with many buttons.

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