Bomberman Reviews
Super Bomberman 2 can be played by up to four players (if you have the peripheral for the SNES that allows you to do that). There is a one-player adventure game in which you control Bomberman, and try to make your way through several different levels.
In this one-player adventure, Bomberman uses bombs as his main weapon. The levels consist of many different environments such as fire levels, ones set in outer space, castle stages, and many more. In each level, Bomberman must use bombs in order to do whatever needs to be done to open the door that leads to the next and more challenging level. In some levels, you must destroy all of the enemies that are on the screen, and in others, you might have to do things such as light up all the lights, or avoid a furnace's fire in order to reach the next level.
What Super Bomberman 2 Is About
The sequel to one of the most popular games to ever grace the Super Nintendo is here in the form of SUPER BOMBERMAN 2. You are Bomberman, and your task is to make your way through each level, using your deadly bombs to take out all kinds of aliens and evil Bombermen...
Pure Snes Classic
Bomberman first appeared on the ZX Spectrum and MSX in 1983. It would be around a decade later when it turned up on the SNES in Super Bomberman, and was the first 4-player game for the console. Originally bundled with the multitap, it would become renowned for it's multiplayer.
The Bomberman games revolves around careful placement of bombs in a grid to destroy foe and obstruction. The grid is so that only horizontal and vertical movement is allowed, and a bomb explosion follows in this manner. The obvious way of disposing of a foe is to trap them between bomb and obstruction. There are various power-ups which can be collected to give Bomberman advanced combat capabilities.
Go go Bomberman!
Over the past decade and a half, Hudson's capitalized on the success of its Bomberman franchise by continuously reinventing the series as different presentations using the same "blow up everything" game mechanic.
He's moved from the top-down world of 2D in classics such as Super Bomberman to the obscure isometric angled perspective of Bomberman Fight on the Sega Saturn, even hitting a full-blown 3D adventure on the Nintendo 64 with, what else, Bomberman 64 .