Gaming reviews: Pikmin 3; The Raven: Legacy of a Master Thief; New Super Luigi
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Your support makes all the difference.Pikmin 3
£44.99
Wii U
Nintendo
****
Pikmin returns after an extended hiatus and delivers exactly what any fan would expect: the continued corralling of the titular helpful herbivores, all wrapped-up in glossy HD visuals courtesy of Wii U. Series stalwarts Captain Olimar and Louie are this time ousted as principal leads by a brave trio of new astronauts, Captain Charlie, Brittany and Alph. The three have crash-landed on the planet Koppai, leaving them seeking both their ship's missing parts and a source of food.
Division of labour is the order of the day, then, and it's here where the console's unique functionality comes to the fore, with players able to set separate destinations for each character by use of the touchscreen map. While the addition of rock and air pikmin adds to an already rich dish, it's the wistful charm of witnessing your pikmin fetching, carrying and bashing monsters that is the chief selling point. Pikmin 3 might be little more than a spruced-up take on its predecessors, but it's still nothing less than essential for Wii U owners.
Michael Plant
The Raven: Legacy of a Master Thief
£20.99 (inc. all three episodes)
PC
Nordic Games
***
Part one of this point-and-click series plays like a homage to the complete works of Agatha Christie. There's a trip on the Orient Express, a cruise aboard an ocean liner (complete with regulation murder victim) and a lead character, one Constable Zellner, who is surely a distant cousin of Hercule Poirot. Subsequent episodes might be wise to feature more challenging conundrums; but this is still a promising start into the mystery of the Raven's return.
MP
New Super Luigi U
£39.99
Wii U
Nintendo
***
To mark the "Year of Luigi" – as Nintendo has christened 2013 – the company has rejigged its Wii U launch title New Super Mario Bros U, removing Mario and installing his oft-dismissed, green-overall-clad brother in his place. What follows is some of the most challenging Super Mario Bros platforming since The Lost Levels. Pixel-perfect jumping, punishing platform configurations and an absence of mid-way points define Luigi's game, in a sometimes frustrating adventure that's not for the faint of heart.
MP
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