Showing posts with label retro gaming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retro gaming. Show all posts

14 Oct 2025

REVIEW: Sonic Wings Reunion (2025 Video Game) - For Nintendo Switch

Sonic Wings Reunion

Review by Jon Donnis

There's something oddly comforting about a game that still looks and feels like it just rolled out of a 90s arcade cabinet. Sonic Wings Reunion, or Aero Fighters Reunion if you prefer the Western name, is exactly that. A throwback to the days when your job was simple: fly up the screen, shoot anything that moves, and try not to blink.


I'll admit, as someone who sank hours into the SNES version back in the day, as well as spending a fair wodge of coin in the arcade game, firing this up gave me that instant jolt of nostalgia. The pixel art isn't trying to impress anyone, and maybe that's what I like about it. It's rough in places, sure, but it's faithful to what those games looked like. You can almost hear the hum of an arcade cabinet behind it.


To its credit, there's a decent amount packed in. You've got more than eight characters, each flying their own aircraft with little quirks, and eight stages that whisk you around the world in rapid bursts of colour and chaos. 

The local co-op is still a joy, especially if you've got someone who remembers how to weave through a wall of enemy fire. And the Tate Mode, where you can flip the screen into a proper vertical setup, is a thoughtful touch for purists.


But let's be honest, the price hurts. Somewhere between £25 and £33 for what's essentially an old-school shooter feels off. Nostalgia only stretches so far, and this one pushes it. The soundtrack doesn't help much either. It's serviceable, but there's not a single tune that sticks. You'll hear it once and forget it ten minutes later.

That said, I still found myself having a good time. Maybe that's habit talking, maybe it's comfort. There's something satisfying about that familiar panic when the screen floods with bullets and you somehow scrape through untouched. It's not thrilling in a modern sense, but it scratches a very specific itch.


Sonic Wings Reunion isn't going to win over anyone new, and maybe it doesn't care to. It feels made for the people who were there the first time round. I can't quite decide if that's charming or lazy, but it works well enough.

Score: 7 out of 10.

Out Now on Nintendo Switch

5 Jul 2025

REVIEW: Worms Armageddon: Anniversary Edition (2025 Backworms Compatible Update)

Review by Jon Donnis

Twenty-five years after it first wriggled into the strategy game scene, Worms Armageddon returns in a newly packaged Anniversary Edition for the Nintendo Switch. First released in 1999 by Team17, this fan-favourite entry in the long-running Worms series is back with a faithful update that stays true to its original charm while adding a few welcome extras.

If you've never played it before, Worms Armageddon is a turn-based strategy game where players control teams of cartoon worms across destructible 2D landscapes. Every match becomes a mix of tactical play, slapstick humour and outright chaos, thanks to the game's huge arsenal of bizarre weapons. The Anniversary Edition brings all of that back, just as it was, but with better compatibility for modern displays and consoles.


One of the biggest additions is the digital museum, which acts as a playable tribute to the history of Worms. It features a timeline of the series and an interactive documentary, giving fans a look behind the scenes at how Worms Armageddon was made and how it fits into the wider legacy of Team17's work. The new edition also includes emulated versions of earlier Worms titles: the Game Boy Color version of Worms Armageddon, Worms World Party for Game Boy Advance, and the original Worms for both Super Nintendo and Mega Drive.

Gameplay-wise, not much has changed, and that's entirely the point. Each match is still played turn by turn, with one worm from each team acting at a time. Movement is deliberately clumsy in a way that adds to the tension, and combat remains a test of both precision and mischief. Players still get to pick from over 55 weapons and tools, from classics like the Bazooka and Holy Hand Grenade to the truly strange, such as the French Sheep Strike. There's also a cheat toggle for the fan-favourite 'Boggy B' code, which instantly unlocks all content if you want to dive straight in.


The single-player campaign includes over 40 missions, but the real joy of Worms is always in multiplayer. This version keeps popular features like Handicapping, Allied Teams and the infamous Worms Disease mode. Whether you're playing with friends on the sofa or solo against the AI, the balance between tactics and chaos is still exactly right.

What also makes this release stand out is the Backworms Compatible Update, a free addition that celebrates the visual styles of the series' early years. It includes 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit variations that tap into the nostalgia of older consoles, without taking anything away from the updated experience on Switch.


There's no gimmick here, no forced reinvention. This is Worms Armageddon as you remember it. And for those who were there the first time round, that's probably all they want. As someone who spent a good part of their teen years glued to the Amiga playing the original Worms, this version feels like a return to form. Worms Armageddon was where everything clicked. The physics, the tone, the pacing. Later versions tried to shake things up but never quite landed the same way.

Yes, the bonus versions from other consoles are a nice touch. You'll likely fire them up once for curiosity's sake, but it's the core 1999 game you'll keep coming back to. The humour still lands, the chaos still builds, and the satisfaction of a well-placed banana bomb is as good now as it ever was.

For new players, this is the ideal place to start. For returning fans, it's a reminder of why Worms Armageddon has never really gone away. And if you're still on the fence after all this time, ask yourself: if Worms Armageddon isn't in your collection yet, where have you been?

It might not be cheap, but it's hard to think of many games that have held up this well. A quarter of a century later, it still delivers.

Out Now on Nintendo Switch and all consoles.