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Sushi Striker review - fantastic puzzler proves that not everything's better on Switch

Ghosts of sashimi.

An eccentric action puzzle game sits a little uneasily in this full-fat package.

In all the excitement around the Switch's first year, it's been easy to lose sight of what's been lost now that Nintendo has effectively brought its handheld and homebound hardware together. Handheld gaming, Nintendo-style, was never just about being able to take your games anywhere with you; it's about a subtly different philosophy of design, and a subtly different flavour of gaming.

You see that in so many Game Boy classics, and you most definitely find it throughout Nintendo's DS line that the Switch effectively killed off (although Nintendo maintains it lives on, it's absent from the company's E3 show this year - which should offer some hint as to where the truth really lies). These were eccentric machines, and eccentric machines make for eccentric games.

None more so, I reckon, than the work of indieszero, a developer that's been making games for Nintendo since the days of the Super Famicom's Satellaview. You might not know the name, but you'll surely know offbeat treats such as Electroplankton, Retro Game Challenge and the Theatrhythm series. Sushi Striker, indieszero's latest, feels very much a part of that curious gaggle; it's another eccentric game, hardwired for Nintendo's handhelds.

Battles come with objectives, and you're ranked at the end too - though it's quite easy to spam your way to an 'S' rank early on.

The premise is brilliant, not just in its ingenuity but also in how you can guess exactly where it was birthed; in some Tokyo kaiten sushi joint, an indieszero employee waiting for that perfect plate of salmon nigiri to roll on by as hungry impatience led to a moment of inspiration. In Sushi Striker, it's all about waiting for that perfect plate to trundle down the conveyor belt - and it's what happens in the seven seconds afterwards where the real game lies.

From first contact, it's about seeking down plates of the same colour as they scroll across your own three lanes. Oh, and all the time you're facing off against someone else doing the same, while you both have a shared lane you can pool from, the two of you piling up plates which can then be flung at your opponent in order to deal damage, the damage they deal stacking depending on combinations of colour. And on that shared lane, you might get power ups unlockable once you've chained a certain amount of plates together that could, for example, freeze your opponent. And all the while, you'll want to factor what type of sushi is on what plate, after all, seeing as there are different benefits to different types.

After sitting through the cutscenes for the entire first world, I skipped through them for the rest of Sushi Striker. I make no apologies.

It's just seven seconds you're given to perform a combo, but Sushi Striker squeezes a lot into those seven seconds. Its match-ups are almost as fast, an encounter never really lasting much longer than a couple of minutes (good job there are over 200 of them, then, in Sushi Striker's fairly lengthy campaign), and the quickfire action each match contains feels exquisite. Touchscreen control is possible when playing the Switch in portable mode, although traditional controls acquit themselves just as well. There's a sweet tactility in swiping plates together then slinging stacks of them at your opponent, and I don't think I've played a puzzle game that's so purely satisfying in its action since Sega's Baku Baku Animal.

Cover image for YouTube videoSushi Striker: The Way of Sushido - How to Play - Nintendo Switch

Sushi Striker is a very Nintendo game, though, in how it takes one simple concept and explores it to its very limit, spinning it off in surprising directions. You'll see that spread out across the campaign, or distilled in one of the puzzle matches that ask you to clear a field of plates in five clean moves. You'll see it in the incredible lateral depth that Sushi Strikers has; where you're showered with XP and perks and have gear to collect (a literal gear, it turns out, seeing as it's the one that powers your sushi belts), and where Sushi Sprites that lend you different power-ups can be collected, levelled and swapped in and out of your line-up.

It's very Nintendo, too, in how it lavishes that simple concept with lush production values. There's an entire anime nestled within; told in sweet but eminently skippable cutscenes, they do at least contribute to the winningly upbeat vibe of sushi striker (there's also a theme song which is definitely worth not skipping - I sit through it every time I boot up the game, and I'm not bored of it yet)

Multiplayer puts both players at an even level, although when playing locally the far player is at a distinct disadvantage given the perspective. It's another example of Sushi Striker not quite fitting on the Switch.

There's one small problem, though. Sushi Striker's a fine example of the kind of leftfield curio that was the lifeblood of the DS line - indeed, it was first announced as a 3DS exclusive when it broke cover at last year's E3 - but something feels a little lost in translation in its move to the Switch. The artwork, clearly made for an 800x240 display, feels exposed when blown up HD, while you miss the precision of a stylus and the added real-estate of the 3DS' extra screen. That 3DS SKU still exists, thankfully, and although it was unavailable prior to launch surely it's the way to play Sushi Striker.

The pricing and packaging also seem slightly out of joint, though you can blame that perception on the shifting landscape of the past ten years - a shift that the DS itself precipitated as it made touchscreen gaming viable before it was ushered into the mainstream on iOS. Sushi Striker, with its quick burst play and snappy touch controls, is one game that's arguably better suited to a handset, and when placed in a box and put on a shelf it stands out as something of an anomaly. Just let it serve as a reminder, too, of a brand of gaming that might well have passed now that Nintendo's found another path to tread.