![]() This one is about a would-be hero named Sunblaze who is undergoing hero training via a simulator made by her father. Precision platformer time again, friends. Not much separating this from most of EXE-Create’s other offerings, but I suppose it does have a giant fluffy dog as a party member. Things start going ca-ca, and you’re going to need to find out why and then deal with it. You play as a character named Ark as he travels a world of four kingdoms, each based on a season. It was released on mobile a while back, and if you feel like saving a few bucks it is a little cheaper on the App Store than it is here on Switch. Kemco and EXE-Create have yet another JRPG to offer Switch owners, and it’s probably going to look quite familiar to most readers. It seems to be of the usual quality we’ve come to expect from Atypical, so if you’ve been a fan of the developer’s prior efforts you’ll probably like what you get here. Many popular tanks from history are represented here, along with five era-appropriate battlefields. Once you’ve settled on your tank, you can head into a single-player campaign with twelve missions to complete, or head online for some seven-on-seven battles. It features a card-driven tank customization system, giving you a near-uncountable number of possibilities. This one comes from the folks at Atypical Games, and is a follow-up of sorts to the popular original Infinite Tanks. ![]() It plays as it should, and you get a decent selection of options. Hamster has done its usual fine work in bringing the game to the Switch. It’s okay, but not too much more than that. The colorful visuals may pull in more casual players, but the game heats up quite a bit near the end. It’s a horizontal cute-em-up featuring an otter and a pig as playable characters. Hacha Mecha Fighter is an NMK game released in 1991. Hamster dug deep again for this week’s Arcade Archives release. Arcade Archives Hacha Mecha Fighter ($7.99) I’m not sure if I’m reviewing this Switch version or the mobile version, but one way or another, a review is coming soon. One playthrough only takes about a half hour or so, but if you want to find all of the secrets and pull off the best ending, you’re going to have to play multiple times. Can you get away with murder? Explore the ship, talk to people, make choices, and do what you need to in order to keep your name clean for the next eight hours. But you’ve got to make sure you’re the only one who knows that information, no matter what. There’s no mystery about the culprit, however: it’s you. You’re a passenger on the SS Hook, a ship about eight hours away from New York. ![]() Whoa, the latest inkle game has dropped, and it looks utterly fantastic. I’ll be doing a review of this one soon, but I can say right now that I very much dig what it’s doing. Thanks to a secret pact made by one of them, death is just a temporary problem. ![]() You control a group of three adventurers, each with their own abilities, and try to guide them through a deadly tower. While this is not a sequel to Castle in the Darkness, they share a lot of strengths. Anyway, the creator of that got together with some other cool people and founded a new studio, and their first project is this game. You can go and grab it if you like, it’s quality action/adventure stuff. Okay, so there’s this really great game on Steam called Castle in the Darkness. Let’s get to business! New Releases Astalon: Tears of the Earth ($19.99) We’ve got summaries of all of them, along with the lists of incoming and outgoing sales of the day. There are a couple of genuinely outstanding games in today’s releases, along with a number of decent, interesting ones. In today’s article, it’s all about those new releases. Hello gentle readers, and welcome to the SwitchArcade Round-Up for June 3rd, 2021.
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