Fishing Resort
In Fishing Resort, players are put in control of their own island vacation and free to do as they please – get up early in the morning and try to grab massive fish in the deep sea, or rent a bicycle and travel to a remote lagoon. With over 20 fish-related mini games and over 200 varieties of fish available – not to mention four-player competitive modes and online leaderboards, which show players how they stack up against other anglers around the world – there’s plenty of content for both casual players and completionists alike.
Review
| 7 | Ever since the former head of Sonic Team, Yuji Naka, left SEGA and formed Prope, it's been challenging to anticipate exactly what the studio's next game might be. After the eccentric Let's Catch, Let's Tap and Ivy the Kiwi?, the company formed a game around a much less quirky aspect: fishing. While the genre hasn't been overflowing with games in recent years it's still a genre that hasn't really advanced that much in a relative sense. So with a developer known for pushing envelope on what's possible with the hardware they're given and going outside the box, does Fishing Resort do the same or is it par for the rest of competition in the genre? » Read the full review |


