![]() ![]() Right before each microgame starts, you’re told which pose to use, then a quick word clue as to what to do with the pose appears before it starts. But what makes these games challenging is that each has a time limit of just a few seconds. Though descriptions of the microgames may sound easy, for example, using the “umbrella” pose of holding the Wii remote vertically upright, and then shaking it from side to side in order to mimic using your hand to fan away smoke in the air, or another pose, such as the “handlebar,” in which you grip both ends of the Wii remote like a handlebar, and quickly moving the pose up and down in order to pump air into a balloon, or the “chauffeur” pose, in which you hold the sides of the remote and use it for steering games, such as driving a car or guiding a paper airplane. They involve all sorts of actions, from driving a car, vacuuming, grinding tea leaves, doing dance moves, answering the phone, sawing a log, unlocking a door, fighting a samurai…and all sorts of other things! The 19 different poses you use in order to play the microgames are also more fun to master than they seem, and they match the microgames so well, you almost feel like you’re really doing that action. So let me expand more on the things that make it so fun and addicting…įirst of all, the sheer number of microgames to play and unlock is amazing. Reading a description of it probably makes it sound boring, but actually playing it is anything but boring. Yeah, that’s pretty much Smooth Moves in a nutshell. ![]() There’s also extra minigames that are longer and a bit more difficult than the mircogames that involve a lot of skill with a certain pose. You can also keep playing the character games in order to unlock all the possible microgames and rack up a high score. Once you complete all the characters’ games, and thus learn all the different possible poses (including the 19th one, using the Nunchuck), the multiplayer option becomes available. As you complete character stories, new stories and other places on the map open up. You need to complete a bunch of microgames (usually learning new Wii remote poses as you go) in order to finish their story. Each character has his, her, or their own minigame, with a simple but cute and amusing story behind it. You’re shown a map of the game’s setting, Diamond City, and the different characters’ locations on the map. When you first start the game, only the single player option is available. There isn’t really much else to this game besides mastering the 19 different Wii remote poses and using them skillfully to complete the over 200 microgames. Though the microgames are only a few seconds each (except for the boss stages), there’s an incredible amount and variety of them, and any Wii fan should find themselves addicted to this seemingly simple but fun game before they know it ^^ This game takes full advantage of the amazing flexibility, sensitivity, and wireless action of the Wii remote. The Nintendo Wii game, Wario Ware – Smooth Moves, is a unique game that’s made up of over 200 microgames (smaller and quicker than minigames ^^) in which you use the Wii remote in different “poses” to mimic how you would do the games’ actions in real life. ![]()
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