![]() ![]() After the first five mazes, though, Bomberman becomes a solid challenge - this is no cakewalk. In order to clear a stage, you must eliminate all of the monsters roaming the maze with your bombs and then uncover the exit. You run through the brick-filled maze, dropping bombs to open up paths and hopefully uncover some power-ups, such as extra bombs, speed boosts, and blast radius boosts. ![]() The pace of the game is smart - the first few mazes are slow enough to get the basics of Bomberman down. But even a complete newcomer to Bomberman will find quite a bit to like here. Very cool: The iPod edition of Bomberman features an exclusive final boss, which is a massive brute that has to be bombed multiple times and is something of a challenge. Everything I loved about the original Bomberman adventures is front-and-center - clean objectives, snappy controls, and a great look. The game offers a veteran player four or so hours of fun, zooming through twenty levels of classic maze-running fun. As a gamer that grew up with Bomberman and once imported a multi-tap controller hub (shaped like Bomberman's head) so I could jam on the Saturn version with nine other friends, I admittedly dug into this iPod port with glee. ![]()
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