Yoshi's New Island

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Template:Infobox Yoshi's New Island is the third game in the Yoshi's Island series for the Nintendo 3DS. Being a midquel between Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island and Yoshi's Island DS, it was released in North America and Europe on March 14, 2014, and in Australia on March 15, 2014. It is also scheduled for July 24, 2014 release in Japan.

Story

Between the events of Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island and Yoshi's Island DS, the couple to whom the Stork gave Baby Mario and Baby Luigi allege that the brothers are not their babies. It goes on searching for the real parents, when it finds Kamek wanting to steal the babies once more. Again, he proceeds to take only Baby Luigi away, and Baby Mario falls on the nearby Egg Island. He is found by a group of Yoshis who decide to take him to his brother and defeat Baby Bowser, since he is planning to turn Egg Island into his vacation home.

After defeating both Baby Bowser and his older self, Egg Island is saved, and Baby Luigi is rescued. The Stork proceeds to take the brothers to fulfill his job of sending them to the correct parents. After the Stork gets there, this couple confirm that Mario and Luigi are indeed their children. After this, Mr. Pipe is seen; it reveals its true identity and vanishes.

Gameplay

Yoshi's New Island is a platform game which plays the same in style as its predecessors, Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island and Yoshi's Island DS. Much of the scenery and moves from the game are similar, as well.

The main addition to gameplay is the ability to swallow extremely large enemies and turn them into colossal eggs called Mega Eggdozers, which are bigger than Giant Eggs. When thrown, they function similarly to Mega Mushrooms, wrecking everything in their path, the accumulating damage filling a meter that can provide Yoshi with up to three extra lives. Poochy is also present and is able to walk on hazardous obstacles as before.

Minigames

Characters

Items/objects

Worlds and Levels

World 1

World 2

World 3

World 4

World 5

World 6

Enemies

New

Returning

Mid-Boss

Bosses

Transformations

Upon entering a Whirly Gate, the Yoshi is led to a course and transforms into different things. Once he is transformed, he must go through a small course that uses the new ability, while watching out for the timer and collecting clocks to replenish it. At the end of the section, there is one or more rings that, if touched, Yoshi turns back to normal and leaves the place. The following are the forms Yoshi can take in the game:

Yoshi Helicopter Yoshi Jackhammer Yoshi Hot-Air Balloon Yoshi Submarine Yoshi Minecart Yoshi Bobsled
Artwork of Helicopter Yoshi from Yoshi's New Island.
Artwork of Jackhammer Yoshi, from Yoshi's New Island.
Hot-Air Balloon Yoshi from Yoshi's New Island
Artwork of Submarine Yoshi, from Yoshi's New Island.
Artwork of a Yoshi minecart transformation, from Yoshi's New Island.
Bobsled Yoshi from Yoshi's New Island
Allows Yoshi to fly around. Allows Yoshi to shatter Rock Blocks with ease. Allows Yoshi to float up. Allows Yoshi to move around underwater and fire torpedoes. Allows Yoshi to move quickly across land. Allows Yoshi to move quickly across snow sections.

Reception

As of March 13, 2014, Yoshi's New Island has garnered mixed or average reception, having a 64 average based on 32 reviews in Metacritic[1] and a 66.88% based on 25 reviews on GameRankings.[2] Jose Otero of IGN praised the solid gameplay, but criticized the game for reusing ideas from the original and its soundtrack, while its new ideas do not stand out. He ended with, "Yoshi’s New Island's inconsistent art and tacked-on new ideas are all layered on top of the same strong platforming and level design that made the original great.", giving the game a 7.9 out of 10.[3] Edge lambasted the game, giving it a 4 out of 10, heavily criticizing the game's reliance on throwback to the original Yoshi's Island.[4] Susan Arendt of Joystiq gave the game a 4 out of 5 stars, praising the solid gameplay.[5] Jim Sterling of The Escapist says the game "boasts some charm and is certainly inoffensive, it's just not all that exciting." He praised the solid gameplay but criticized the tedium and difficulty. He gave the game 3 out of 5 stars.[6] Dave Letcavage of Nintendo Life gave the game a 5 out of 10. He also criticized the game for being not being necessarily bad, but being "dull" and "unimpressive". He stated that the game is playable but is mostly filler.[7] GameXplain gave it 4 out of 5 stars, saying it was more of the same but that that was a good thing while stating that the soundtrack was often subpar.[8]

Beta elements

Main article: List of Yoshi's New Island beta elements

Glitches

Main article: List of Yoshi's New Island glitches

Gallery

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Media

External links

References

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Template:Yoshi series

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