Pretty dark sounding storyline for a Pokémon game, isn’t it? Well, don’t worry – it’s still very much an all ages affair. This means Pikachu has to ally with new friends Tepig, Snivy and Oshawott in order to find Piplup, figure out what is behind the madness inflicting Wish Park and bring everyone within the park back to normal. Unfortunately something happens and the two Pokémon are split up. As diabetically delicious as this sounds, there’s something odd about the place so Pikachu and Piplup decide to check it out. Welcome to Wish Park! Wish Park is an odd little place just for Pokémon that is made out of cookies and candy. So does PokéPark 2 give fans of the first game the improvements they were looking for, or is it just more of the same? I loved the premise of the original game, but wanted more playable Pokémon in combat, some better controls and the ability to play multiplayer version of all the mini-games. In fact, with the release of PokéPark 2: Wonders Beyond, now there are two. Sure you could only play as Pikachu, but it was a lot of fun and I still see gamers go, “Wah! When we will get action based Pokémon combat like in a fighting game or a button masher?” Well, there already is.
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It’s a shame too, because it was the first game to give a lot of Pokémon fans what they had been clamoring for: 3D real time Pokémon battles. Due to an utter lack of marketing by Nintendo of America, the title was one of the few Pokémon games that was overlooked, even by the core fan base. and Nintendo released PokePark Wii: Pikachu’s Adventure. Roughly a year and a quarter ago, Creatures Inc.