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Cubemen 2 review
Cubemen 2 review











cubemen 2 review

Overall Cubemen 2 is a fun throwaway timewaster and represents a genre not seen on consoles very often, but it does little to convince players that's a bad thing. This is particularly galling as the game was only released on the eShop a month ago! The user-made levels can still be played with CPU opponents so they aren't rendered null, but this is a massive shame as a bustling online scene is crucial to keeping a game such as this interesting. Unfortunately, testing out what online gameplay is like against human opponents proved to be impossible as, despite the impressive decision to implement cross-platform play across all versions of the game, the online lobbies were completely empty on every occasion Cubed3 attempted to host or join games.

cubemen 2 review

This is a nice touch by developer Nnooo, and it gives the sense that the game will continue to grow - some of the maps available were very elaborate and much larger than the single-player offerings. Fortunately this track isn't hideously grating even so, there's little to treat the eyes and ears to here.Įxploring the game's other modes, there is an intuitive and relatively deep level editor, and users can share maps online for downloading to local play and hosting online games. The maps are all placed in a large brown void, and there's only one theme tune which is on repeat in the menus and the levels themselves. There's plenty of skinsets to customise the way the game looks, for the Cubemen themselves and for the maps, meaning it's possible to pit pirates against Saxons, all in an incongruous cityscape setting with textures reminiscent of Minecraft but as this doesn't change the behaviour of the units or the gameplay in any fashion, it all comes across as a bit pointless. The models are sharp and the game runs with no technical difficulties even with many enemies on screen. Perhaps this decision was made in the interest of retaining difficulty, which is understandable, but it does mean that the satisfaction achieved in browser games such as Flash Element TD or Bloons TD, where the map would eventually be covered in the player's units unleashing hell on the onslaught of enemies, is hard to come by. This is disappointing as it strangles the strategy of the game to have so few units available for purchase at any one time. What is definitely frustrating is that money to purchase the cubic troops is just a little too scarce - rarely can more than three of even the medium-expense units be bought at the beginning of any level, and the income doesn't seem to generate very quickly. Whether this is seen as challenging or frustrating will depend on the player. Cubemen 2 is not an expressly difficult game, but it does require trial-and-error to see what strategies will work on some of the later levels. The enemies start out few and feeble on the first levels, but before long the levels are taking upwards of ten minutes, and may require quite forward-thinking and strategy to be successful. The single-player campaign is a modest 30 levels (split over two campaigns - a standard and an expert) but these will take a good couple of hours to beat. Each unit costs money, and more money is gained from destroying more enemies if all goes according to plan, the map will be heavily guarded by the end of the sometimes fairly lengthy levels with a big cubic army. There's a wide array of Cubemen units to deploy, ranging from the simple foot soldier to mortar-wielders, flamethrower-users and ice-summoners. What Cubemen 2 does differently is that the "towers" are in fact mobile units - the titular Cubemen walk from the base to the destination and take out any enemies that fall in their sights on the way.

cubemen 2 review cubemen 2 review

The maps are grid-based to enable easier strategic placement of towers, which is particularly fluid thanks to the Wii U GamePad's touch screen. The gameplay of Cubemen 2 will be a familiar concept to anyone who has played a tower defence game before there is a base to be defended, an enemy base where hordes of enemies spawn and a large amount of space in-between.













Cubemen 2 review