You have to avoid the spider-like enemies and collect ever more LocoRoco in your group. It's a platform game where you tilt the world with the left and right buttons on the controller in order to manoeuvre the LocoRoco, coloured jelly-like characters, through each level. The novelty, besides the character’s singing and cute aesthetic, is that you control the game with just two buttons, tilting and bumping your characters through each level. Perfect for this time of year.This creates a world of plants and creatures to investigate. It’s as fun and heartwarming as it ever was, and will bring a smile to the faces of anyone playing. It felt great to go back to a game that is almost a decade old at this point, and discovered that it really hasn’t aged at all. Traversing each level can be as quick or methodical as you like, depending on whether you want to find the secrets or just enjoy the ride. LocoRoco 2 Remastered is a fun little platformer at heart, sure, but beyond that it’s a game filled with varied content that always, always makes you smile. It’s not an essential part of the game, but it’s just another layer of depth in a game that could easily be seen as a simple, quirky platformer. Finding secrets and accomplishing certain tasks will earn special items that are used as the components for adding items and new rooms to the treehouse. The third part of the game has you building and expanding a house for the MuiMui you find throughout the game. You can’t help but grin as the rhythm minigame begins, as your ragtag bunch sings along to your beats. These require a set number of your little friends to take part in waking up a MuiMui (another little native of this planet) or to rouse the wildlife into life, through song. The more LocoRoco fruit you collect, the more likely you’ll be able to take part in the musical portions of LocoRoco 2 Remastered. Holding Circle again will have all your LocoRoco shouting adorably, as they merge back into one big, round blob of cute. This allows you to fit through small gaps to progress, or sometimes to discover the many secrets dotted around every stage. The fun comes from eating the fruit that grows around each level, which increases your size each time holding Circle will split you into several LocoRoco, depending on how many fruits you’ve munched. There are only two buttons, L1 and R1, used to tilt the world view and tip the character into rolling press both buttons together and you’ll initiate a jump, dependent on the inertia you’ve built up through tilting. That quest has you rolling and jumping around each level, rounding up your fellow LocoRoco and ridding the planet of the Moja threat. It’s a simple plot for a simple game, providing all you need to set you off on your quest.
They’re attacking the LocoRoco planet once again and it’s up to you to drive back the darkness and restore life to the affected areas. It’s not like LocoRoco 2 had a sprawling narrative or anything.Īfter being defeated in the first game, the sinister Moja have devised a song that causes living things to wither, sucking all the colour and life from plants and wildlife alike.
The cutscenes don’t quite fare as well, looking horribly compressed, but luckily they lose none of their charm.
It looks great though, with no visible drop in visual quality during gameplay you could be forgiven for thinking that this was never a PSP game, it’s that sharp.
Considering the PSP’s resolution was only 480×270, bringing it to PS4 at 1080p (and it even has 4K support) must have been quite the big job. I didn’t really get to play much of the sequel back on PSP, but it works just as well as the first game, adding a few extras like new new characters and one or two gameplay additions. LocoRoco 2 Remastered is no different, in that regard.
You couldn’t help but smile when you were playing it, even on the tougher levels that were dotted around the game. Its mix of simple, two-button gameplay and adorable design made for such a lovely, happy experience.