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Tetris Party Live

Score: 80%
ESRB: Everyone
Publisher: Tetris Online, Inc.
Developer: Tetris Online, Inc.
Media: Download/1
Players: 1 - 4 (Nintendo WiFi)
Genre: Puzzle

Graphics & Sound:

Tetris Party Live takes the game that made the original GameBoy what it was, and puts in on your DSi via digital download. This particular version of Tetris doesn't really offer any new and amazing mechanics, with the possible exception of the power-up items, but what it has is done well and the game as a whole does a good job of representing the 26 year-old puzzle game.

Much like the gameplay, Tetris Party Live doesn't offer any fancy bells or whistles when it comes to presentation. While there are a few backdrops you can put behind your gameboard and five different background tunes to put on while playing, there aren't any flashy or unnecessary visual or sound effects to distract the player from what they are doing. Both in form and style, Tetris Party Live is pure, simple Tetris ... just with some multiplayer capabilities.

Actually, one of the game's sound effects comes through loud and clear and it becomes very useful - especially in higher levels when the pieces are dropping fast. Namely, this is the siren that sounds when your blocks near the top of the grid. While the game is very playable with the sound off, this kind of audio-input becomes very useful and helps to add the pressure when you are almost out of the game.


Gameplay:

In fact, Tetris Party Live's multiplayer aspects don't even stray that far from the standard Tetris gameplay style. When playing against an opponent, either A.I.-driven or human-controlled (via the Nintendo WiFi network), the only affect you have on your challenger, and vice versa, is that rows collapsed on one player's board appears on the other's. The game still comes down to keeping your pile of blocks as low as possible and trying to clear out as many rows as you can. This does mean that the goal is slightly shifted. Instead of simply trying to play as long as possible, you are just trying to outlast your opponent.

As for the rest of the gameplay, blocks fall from the top of the grid, you rotate them and position them how you want, and if you happen to form a solid row when the piece is in place, then that row goes away. There are a couple of gameplay options you can fiddle with for slightly varying effects - but for the most part, it's simply Tetris.

As for those options, in Single Player Mode, you can turn the Endless option on or off. When on, you simply try and last as long as possible and attempt to earn as many points as you can before your blocks reach the top. Of course, the longer you last, the faster the blocks fall, so quick reflexes are a must to make any significant progress in this mode. With Endless turned off, you simply play until you have cleared 150 lines. In this case, how well you do is based primarily on how quickly you cleared those lines and what your score is at the end (remember, you get bonuses for multiple rows cleared at a time, as well as a bonus for actually clearing the board).

The only other interesting options the game provides are in the multiplayer matches. Before the game starts, you can decide how you want the cleared rows to appear. You can choose between the rows appearing at the bottom or having them show up in the same position they were cleared from.

Okay, I'm not being completely truthful here, there is one major feature added to this version of Tetris that really shakes things up, and that's power-up items that are earned by destroying blocks with items in them and can perform quite a wide range of interesting feats. These pick ups can do everything from destroying a number of lines at the bottom of the grid to shifting columns left or right, or even freezing time for various opponents or hiding your opponents' Next and Hold areas so they aren't sure what is coming next. Other pick up items keep your opponents from rotating their blocks or can cause your own board to collapse some in order to fill in some holes you might have on the grid. I find this power-up addition interesting. While the rest of the game keeps itself as close to the original game as possible, this one added feature really does a lot to enhance the overall feel of the game to make it appealing to more than just retro-gamers wanting another way to play the classic puzzle game.


Difficulty:

The few changes made to Tetris Party Live that deviate from the original Tetris game do have an interesting affect on difficulty. Like I said above, none of these changes are new so you shouldn't be surprised if you've played a version or two of this game that has some of these changes. One difference that really affects the game's difficulty is the addition of a holding area. Basically, with the touch of a shoulder button, you can put the currently falling block into an area off to the side for use later. If there is already one in there, then the previously-held block appears in the newly-held one's place. I found this to be a great tool for clearing massive rows at a time, especially since I could quickly save off an "I" block when it appeared for later, and once I built up for rows that are all missing the same column, I would just tap the button to pull it out and slam it down for massive points.

A fairly standard option that has been around for a while now is the ability to turn on a "Ghost" of your falling block. This shows you where and how the block will land if you were to drop it. Obviously, this makes the game much easier than with the option turned off. The last gameplay difference is the ability to see the next several blocks instead of just the next one. If you are good enough to plan that far ahead, then this will definitely slant the game more in your favor.

The other aspects that change the game's difficulty include the various settings you can flip through before starting the game. For the most part, these are settings like the opposing A.I.'s difficulty (a range from 1 to 5) and what level you start off at in Single Player Mode (1 - 15).


Game Mechanics:

As I've said before, Tetris Party Live keeps to its roots by providing the original gameplay experience with only a few added mechanics. As a result, anyone who has played another version of Tetris shouldn't have any problems picking up this game and playing it.

Rotating your blocks is as simple as tapping the (A) and (B) buttons for clockwise and counter-clockwise spins respectively. The D-pad is used to move the blocks from side to side for positioning as well as to speed the descent or slam it down with the (Up) direction, and using an item you've picked up is as simple as tapping the (X) button. The shoulder buttons are the only other control you will have to worry about and that's for swapping your current piece with the one in the Hold area.

Overall, I enjoyed Tetris Party Live. It kept to the core gameplay and classic feel, but added enough other features to make it more than just a port of the original. If you are a puzzle game fan and have a spare 500 points, I would say that this is a solid download. Otherwise, you might want to give it some extra thought before actually adding points to your account and downloading this game to your DSi.


-J.R. Nip, GameVortex Communications
AKA Chris Meyer

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