Hottest Selling Nintendo DS Lite Games Reviews
Read Nintendo DS Lite Game Reviews on the best selling Nintendo DS Lite Games.
At the time of writing, these were the best selling games:
Top Nintendo DS Lite Game #1: Mario Cart DS
Actual Customer Review on Mario Kart DS from Amazon.com
“As of this writing, Mario Kart DS is hands down the absolute best game available for the DS. As one would expect from the long running series, Mario Kart DS allows you to play as Mario and co. in a series of go-kart races.
The gameplay mechanics will feel like putting on an old glove for longtime fans of the series, while newcomers will have no trouble getting into the game. As you progress through the various circuits, you’ll find bonus tracks, karts, and characters to unlock as well, which adds a nice amount of replayability to the single player mode.
Along with the new tracks, there are some retro tracks available as well taken from the past incarnations of the series. The real main attraction of Mario Kart DS however, is the fantastic Wi-Fi multiplayer mode. There are only a handful of DS games which support Wi-Fi capability, and none is better at it than Mario Kart. This is where the real meat and potatoes of the game lies, and you’ll have a hard time putting down your DS after getting a taste of it.
The game looks, sounds, and plays phenominally, and all in all, Mario Kart DS is yet another excellent, must own, first party title for the DS, and the Wi-Fi options make it even more of a smash.”
Top Nintendo DS Lite Game #2: Super Mario Brothers
Actual Customer Review on Super Mario Brothers from Amazon.com
“Super Mario Brothers was one of my favorite games when it first came out. With New Super Mario Bros DS, you get the game fun gameplay - enhanced - in a nice portable system.
This isn’t just a remake - it is sort of like how the Wizard of Oz starts out in black and white in a gritty, quiet town and then turns into multi-color, sparkling larger than life song-filled splendour. You get the NES versions of the game with similar - but not exactly the same - levels that have been updated from 2D to 3D. You get extra features like ground pounds, and mushrooms that make you SUPER large - you don’t have to jump to break blocks any more, you can just walk and crash into them. Other mushrooms make you incredibly tiny, to reach places you could not before.
The combination of old style classic gameplay and updated graphic, sounds, and features is really quite good. These games were stellar in the first place, with their addictive levels that were just the right balance of challenging and fun. Add in the easy to carry with you DS gameplay, the new features and hidden things to look for, and I really found this just about perfect for an arcade game.
Yes, you could complain that you can zap through the game in a full day of gameplaying. However, this game series wasn’t ever meant to be a “month long role playing complex adventure”. It was always meant to be short, easily playable sessions that you could fit in while you waited for dinner to be ready. You could save and exit when you had to run to school, and then pick up again when you had time the next day without having to review 8 pages of storyline notes.
This makes the game PERFECT for carrying around in your DS. If you end up waiting in line for 20 minutes, you get through another section. If your bus gets stuck in traffic, that’s another level you can get through.
Plus, there is replayability here, while you try to track down the hidden items and coins.
I enjoyed the minigames as well. Certainly you wouldn’t buy this game FOR the minigames, but heck, if they’re going to throw them in for free, you might as well enjoy them! I’m not usually one for DS multiplayer games, but it’s nice that they did include that as well for those who want to play with a friend.
In general I was quite impressed with this, and recommend it heartily!”
Top Nintendo DS Lite Game #3: Brain Age
Actual Customer Review on Brain Age from Amazon.com
“Thinking. Analyzing. Solving Problems. Reading. Logic. These are just some of the skills that Brain Age will help you develop (or re-develop).
No, it’s not Resident Evil or Splinter Cell. But it is as fun and addictive; it’s certainly as challenging if not more challenging, and it’s a nice pallet cleanser from the plethora of pure entertainment value games that my kids and I play.
Brain Age is a bit advanced at times for my grade schoolers, but the parts that they do get really help them develop the skills that they are concurrently working on in school. Big Brain Academy is a much easier (not better) alternative for younger children.
There’s a daily training area that gives your skills a workout. And there’s a test area that challenges you to quickly and accurately work through various tasks, then provides you with a calculation of your Brain Age based on how well you did on the test. Sudoku has it’s own area to train the brain on number logic.
Kids reading this will NO vote me to death for saying this, but this is a great game for parents to get for their kids. It’s one of the only ones (Big Brain Academy is the other) that I never take away from my own kids when they’ve misbehaved or simply just had too much video gaming. They never complain.
One word of advice: Brain Age has a hard time recognizing an “8″ if you write it the way you’d skate a figure 8; it likes it better when you draw an 8 as two circles on top of each other.
Addictive fun. Buy it. “
November 9th, 2008 at 8:42 pm
Although Mario is more popular, i really liked Brain Age more than it.
http://www.dslitereview.com