My name is Rich and I’m a Peg-aholic
As soon as I fired up Peggle Nights I was transported back to the first time I got my hands on the original Peggle. I had no idea what to expect when I picked up Peggle for the first time and was surprised when my eyes were treated to a cacophony of pastel colored animals all vying to “out-cute” the other. There was so much about the aesthetic that would have ordinarily turned me off immediately but my love of gaming overruled my machismo laden first reaction and I powered through the first game like a champ. The simple yet deep game grasped my attention and did not let go until I was privy to each and every one of the Peggle Master’s powers.
If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix It
I am quite glad that Peggle Nights doesn’t mess around too much with what the original game provided when it came to gameplay. The game is still played very much like a game of pachinko where your ball starts at the top of a level and falls down hitting pegs that eventually are removed from the level. Your only real goal is to hit all of the orange pegs in the level to progress while racking up points on your way to doing so. To spice things up a bit you’re also given the ability to use special powers that each of the Peggle Masters possess that can aid you in beating each of the levels. These powers can range from a Super Guide ability that allows you to see how your ball will bounce when first shot to the eerily accurate Zen Ball power that maximizes any shot you make so you can rack up an even higher score. The sequel has added the help of a new Peggle Master by the name of Marina who’s power uses a hefty dose of electricity to help you shock the pegs into submission.

Deceptively Simple
After playing hours of the original and now a few more hours of the sequel I can appreciate the campyness of the Peggle Series and ahve come to view it as one of the integral part of the games. Simply put, Peggle exudes pure fun out of every corner of the experience it provides. You’re rewarded visually with little cues that let you know something “awesome” has happened when really all you did was click a single button in the direction you felt would hit the most pegs and hope for the best. Out of this simplicity sprouts actual strategy that works its way into your shots before you realize it’s happening. You haven’t experience real fun until you’ve had “Ode To Joy” blaring from your speakers while a technicolor-ed array of random explosions, phrases, and point totalling that makes you feel like you’ve just solved the meaning of life rather than just shooting a ball at a couple of pegs.
Yes, I sound like I’ve drank some sinister brain washing kool-aid supplied by the folks at PopCap but anyone that’s played the game can attest to the fact that this game is addictive. Hours can be sunk into just playing through the main story mode and infinitely more if you factor in the challenge modes or perfecting your scores in completed levels. Both Peggle and Peggle Nights are great games that will immediately pull in anyone willing to give the game five minutes of their time.

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