Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (Nintendo Switch)
Reviews
Show product page
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate review – Nintendo vs. the world
Nintendo's crossover fighter is bigger and better than ever and now it has a single-player mode that's just as good as multiplayer.- The core fighting system is cleverly refined and more enjoyable than ever
- World of Light is one of the best single-player modes ever in a fighter
- Mountains of content that will last hundreds of hours
- Steep learning curve is poorly handled, with a lack of tutorials and useful help
- Surprisingly poor museum features
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (for Nintendo Switch)
Anyone you know who enjoys video games is likely to find at least one Smash Ultimate character that appeals to them. It takes everything that made Smash 4 on the Wii U so compelling and expands on it-with the added Switch benefit of handheld mode. All this makes Super Smash Bros.- The biggest roster yet
- Loads of content, spanning dozens of video game series
- Polished, satisfying gameplay with lots of variety
- Lacks proper online ranking tiers
- No online tournament mode
- Collectible spirits lack context and detail
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Conventional logic says that a game as enormous as Super Smash Bros. Ultimate should be collapsing under its own weight like a dying star. It feels like the Mr. Creosote of video games, a title almost disgustingly distended with content.
Super Smash Bros Ultimate Review – Simply Smashing
Super Smash Bros is a franchise pretty much everyone gets hype over. During the week since it released, it seems like everywhere I go I overhear bits of conversation about the latest in the series, Super Smash Bros Ultimate . It's no big surprise.- Contains almost every character and stage ever included in a Smash game
- New Spirit Mode makes for a great single-player experience
- and adds light RPG elements to the game
- Same great couch co-op experience
- AI can be ditzy when it comes to vertical stage changes
- Tags
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (Nintendo Switch)
It's hard to call Smash Ultimate the best crossover fighter ever made in a world where Capcom Vs.- Massive roster
- Incredible fan service
- World Of Light is great
- Can be hard to follow on the small screen
- Inherently quite unbalanced
- Smash's mayhem isn't for everyone
Review: Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Calling your game Ultimate, now that requires some nerve. But in the case of Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, it is hard-earned. This is the most complete game in the series, and a celebration of everything Nintendo (and video gaming in general).- An insane amount of fighters
- stages
- An amazing soundtrack
- Easy to learn
- hard to master
- A lot of options and customization possible
- Meaty singleplayer campaign
- ...that does get repetitive though
- Online options limited and sometimes laggy
- Target Smash and Home Run Contest are missing
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Review
lives up to its name, offering the most comprehensive game in the series to date. It has an absurd amount to play, fight, and unlock – though that can be to its detriment at times. While the World of Light adventure mode isn't reason alone to get Smash Bros.
Nintendo Switch Super Smash Bros. Ultimate SUPER SMASH BROS ULT review
A hallmark of excellence. There may be flaws, but they are negligible and won't cause massive damage.
Nintendo has never been ones to conform to rules. They'll always go out of their way to make their games a little different to everyone else. Super Smash Bros. has for years now been their take on the fighting genre – you either get it or you don't.
- Adventure mode will last you a long time
- A soundtrack so good you can buy the game just for that
- The spirits inject a whole new strategic element
- 74 fighters and over 100 stages to fight in
- Home-run contest is gone
- Hopefully online mode won't be as broken as other Smash games