We're just one week away from the launch of Nintendo's latest Switch and 3DS offering Sushi Striker: The Way of Sushido, and this brand new trailer has arrived just in time to teach you the basics.
You'll get to see the setup of conveyor-belt sushi lanes, plate-colour matching, and how to utilise the different sushi types to your advantage to defeat any enemy or boss who stands between you and sushi-filled victory. If you've been patiently waiting for the game to arrive, hopefully this will whet your appetite a little.
In the meantime, remember that a Sushi Striker demo is currently available on Nintendo Switch, so make sure to try the game out for yourself if you're interested.
Until then, let us know if you're excited for this one in the comments below.
Comments 28
IDK, $50 for this title is a bit too steep for me.
I originally wasn't going to get this but the more I saw of it the more I actually warmed up to it. It looks to be one tasty dish!
Btw, where is Sushi Striker Demo for 3DS version ?
The Switch demo was fun and apologetically Japanese. I liked it a lot!
The gameplay is very satisfying and fits the outlandish (by that I mean, it's crazy, but crazy enough to work) world nicely.
The demo is fun but I actually feel it’s better suited to 3DS than Switch.
NL would rather write about this overpriced game than discuss the stability of the new released firmware... this site has gone downhill.
@Nincompoop Not stable enough to talk about it
I was up for buying this, then I played the demo and felt there wasn’t really much strategy than wiggling the joystick in the vaguely right direction. It isn’t in the same level with something like Puyo Puyo.
Which goes to show you demo’s work both ways!
@Nincompoop Why is that a problem? This game is so much fun. And to be fair, that firmware update don't really do any changes at all, so imo it's not really anything worth writing about.
@Nincompoop
I will buy this game on July 2018.
@Anti-Matter Why would I care what you buy? lol.
@Slasher They used to write about new firmware all the time, it's like a tradition here... now they don't care about the stability anymore.
@Anti-Matter lol. Buy the game, than take a photo of it and show all of us
@1UP_MARIO
Well, Okay.
Thanks for the reminder on the demo. Totally forgot about it.
I'm still not sure who they imagined to be in the market for this game, but good on them for giving it a chance.
I'll be picking this up soon after launch.
I downloaded the demo. I love the goofy story and the art style, but I really thought the gameplay was a little to blah for me to pay $50 for it. Maybe at $20 I could justify the purchase. I'll pass for now.
@LegendOfPokemon I agree. Aftet I played the switch demo I ended up preordering the 3ds version instead. The smaller portability of the 3ds combined with the built in stylus control as well as the cheaper price point is what cause me to go for the 3ds version. (I'd much rather pay $40 than $50 for this game)
Day one for me, but I'm still not 100% sure on the platform. I've already pre-ordered for Switch but after the demo, I'm considering going for the 3DS version instead. Decisions...
I love puzzles games so day one buy for me on the 3DS
Wanted to like this a whole lot more than I did. The premise is wonderfully silly and the gameplay is fun enough but I feel it's hampered by a lack of stylus and I can't get behind the art. It's a weird mish-mash of quality and some of the character illustrations are quite badly done with really off proportions. It doesn't feel like a Nintendo level of polish unfortunately.
I might grab it on 3DS though when it's on sale. It's not bad it's just not as high a quality of the ton of other games out on Switch for the same price.
I would pick this up for maybe $10. I'm still shocked thinking how they could price this so badly.
I hope it sells terribly at that price point and gets put on regular, significant discounts.
With all of the other indie games priced below my "impulse buy" threshold of $15 though, I doubt I'll ever buy this game.
I played the demo and loved it way more than I thought. I don’t think that the price is a real problem, what I think is that this game is not geared too much for a Western audience and outside Japan is not going to get many sales. Japanese are going to be much more in touch with art style, the crazy story and the sushi puns and all than anyone else. I don’t see it breaking any sales records in Japan either, but it’ll probably fare much better around here.
I was going to get this game for the Switch, then I downloaded the demo and realized how it feels like it would work a lot better as a 3DS game, so now I have the 3DS version pre-ordered.
@kirbygirl @Oat @LegendOfPokemon I totally agree with you. It feels like this game was originally designed around the 3DS and intended to be just a 3DS game, but then they decided to make a Switch version as well just to sell more copies.
This would totally be perfect on my mobile as a free title with in-game purchases for stronger Sushi Yokais when you progress and see the need of it...not so much on a Switch. Wrong device and wrong audience.
The game is really fun, but I think like it's a simple game saddled with too much production value (i.e. the anime cutscenes with full VA) which drives the price up. Similar issue as with Grey Goo a few years back, a rather simple RTS but the cinematics were beautiful... Which drove the price up and audience away.
But I'm sure a few parents will get this to occupy their children with, just like with Kirby Star Allies. I wouldn't buy that for myself, but for one of my nieces? Sure.
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