Kirby no Kirakira Kizzu
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kirby no KiraKira Kizzu (Kirby's Sparkling Kids) | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | HAL Laboratory |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Release date(s) | February 1, 1998 (Japan) |
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Mode(s) | Single player, multiplayer |
Rating(s) | ESRB: Everyone |
Platform(s) | Super Famicom / SNES |
Media | 32-megabit cartridge |
Kirby no Kirakira Kizzu (カービィのきらきらきっず - Kirby's Sparkling Kids), also commonly referred to as 'Kirby's Super Star Stacker', is a Kirby video game released in 1998 for the Super NES. It is one of the few Kirby games to never be released outside of Japan.
[edit] Gameplay
Kirby's Sparkling Kids is in essence a SNES version of Kirby's Star Stacker with nearly identical gameplay. The point of the game is to remove falling star blocks by placing matching animal friends (Rick, Coo, and Kine) at either end.
[edit] Modes
- Story Mode - One night 'Mr. Star' flies through the sky over Popstar. Dedede sees and decides to shoot it out of the sky. It breaks into pieces which fall all over Dream Land. One piece lands on Kirby's head, and Kirby agrees to help him find his scattered friends. Kirby faces several foes in vs. battles to win back the other star pieces, including Waddle Dee, Kawasaki, Knuckle Joe, Meta Knight and Dedede. The final boss is a witch onion girl called Grill.
- Challenge Mode - In this mode you see how many stars you can clear.
- Round Clear - Clear stars to attack King Dedede.
- VS - Battle against a friend in 2-player mode.
- Time Attack - Clear stars with a 3 minute time limit.