If you're a gym addict you probably shouldn't throw out your membership card just yet, but for everyone else looking to get fitter, Ring Fit Adventure is a fantastic way to do it that won't bore you senseless.
Play it properly and you'll definitely feel it the next morning – a sure sign that it's at least doing you some good – while the compelling adventure mode with its RPG elements will ensure that you'll keep coming back for more.
A beautiful little game, Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker is a winner whether you're after puzzling or jump button-less platforming. With beautiful visuals and an upbeat soundtrack, it's a real gem; a wonderful and gorgeous 3D platform puzzler fit for all ages, and one which you should definitely experience if you're yet to.
The two-player co-op Nintendo added makes this offering even tastier with Toadette joining the Captain, and there's even a nice little nugget of DLC for once you've polished off the main game.
Super Mario Party Jamboree is a fantastic entry in the franchise that focuses on improving the core mechanics and experience, making for a more involving board game in the process, whilst also polishing everything to a slick sheen.
Online aspects and modern stuff like the game's battle pass and collectibles are woven in smoothly, and the various new modes all have their place in a package that also delivers the goods in terms of minigame quality.
For our money, Jamboree is the best Mario Party to date. So if your invite didn't come through, this is the party to crash. And the laboriously named Super Mario Party Jamboree - Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Jamboree TV (seriously, two 'Jamborees'?!) adds a whole load more ice in the cooler for an even bigger, better shindig.
Gavin first wrote for Nintendo Life in 2018 before joining the site full-time the following year, rising through the ranks to become Editor. He can currently be found squashed beneath a Switch backlog the size of Normandy.
Do the Xenoblade games really not count? Nintendo OWNS Monolithsoft, that makes them first party surely...
Same goes for Fire Emblem, and Smash, and numerous smaller games that are all first party - an Intelligent Systems game like WarioWare counts, yet Fire Emblem does not? What is being included is strange here.
Comments 2
Do the Xenoblade games really not count? Nintendo OWNS Monolithsoft, that makes them first party surely...
Same goes for Fire Emblem, and Smash, and numerous smaller games that are all first party - an Intelligent Systems game like WarioWare counts, yet Fire Emblem does not? What is being included is strange here.
@Matl At the time Nintendo didn't own them entirely, maybe that's why. Nintendo only owned 100 percent of Monolith from the end of last year or so.
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