Super NES Retro Review: Kirby Super Star

Join us as we review all the games on the SNES Classic Mini Edition in chronological order!

By Nadia Oxford

This article references relevant content from the vg247.com website. Original article link: [https://www.vg247.com/super-nes-retro-review-kirby-super-star]

Super NES Retro Review: Kirby Super Star

This article first appeared on USgamer, a partner publication of VG247. Some content, such as this article, has been migrated to VG247 for posterity after USgamer's closure - but it has not been edited or further vetted by the VG247 team.

Join us as we review all the games on the SNES Classic Mini Edition in chronological order!

The SNES Classic Edition is technically loaded with 21 games, but when you unfold Kirby Super Star, you find something a little extra: Eight games in one. Hey, we're talking about a Kirby game, here. That little pink puffball can probably hold entire galaxies in his belly. It's only natural one of his games makes like a Russian nesting doll, too.

The SNES Classic's game count "cheat" is totally our gain. Kirby Super Star was one of Nintendo's final games for the SNES, and it neatly caps a strong legacy of A+ platformers for the 16-bit system. I'm not as zealous about Super Star as I am about Mega Man X, Super Metroid, or Yoshi's Island, but neither does it feel wrong to have Kirby bring up the rear on the SNES Classic's line-up (and on this review series. Sniff).

Kirby Super Star is known as "Kirby's Fun Pak" in Japan and PAL regions, and I feel like that's a more accurate name for this sweet little bundle of games. Well, a Kirby game by any other name is just as huggable. Here's what you'll find in Super Star:

Bare bear beware.

As you can probably tell, several of the games on Kirby Super Star are well beyond the realm of single-screen diversions. This isn't some rip-off mini-game collection. Put together, the content of Super Star equals any decent-sized SNES action-adventure title, and then some.

The games all play well, too. After all, Kirby is Kirby. If Ys is the most dependable RPG franchise on the market, I vote Kirby as this industry's most dependable action franchise.

Kirby also runs on a very different set of mechanics than Mario, Mega Man, et al. That alone makes them interesting. Kirby games are less about finesse (after all, bottomless pits are far less of a danger to Kirby than Mario) and more about careful exploration and learning how to use Kirby's enemies for your own gain. There isn't a lot of gameplay variation between most of the games in Kirby Super Star, but that's OK: Kirby games are a unique experience to begin with, so you probably won't get sick of binging on Super Star's collection of adventures.

Do we have to keep harassing Whispy Woods? He's a tree. He doesn't move much.

Super Star's "Helper" option is another Dyna Blade feather in the collection's cap. When Kirby inhales an enemy in one of Super Star's adventures, he can turn his foe into a CPU-controlled sidekick that uses its powers for good. Kirby can re-absorb his friend whenever you want – which is a little horrifying, but that's none of our business. Helpers can also be controlled by a second player, essentially making Super Star a meaty two-player experience.

Kirby Super Star may not be a member of platforming royalty like some of the games included on the SNES Classic Edition, but it's fun, well-rounded, and very enjoyable to be around – like its puffy protagonist. Don't forget to give Kirby the attention he deserves when you get your own SNES Classic.