A classic from the 16-bit era finally gets a worldwide release.
Closing out a month of celebration with a look at the best Kirby has to offer.
A spin-off, or just seemingly ahead of its time in how it treated Kirby's movement differently than we were used to?
HAL hasn't just been making Kirby games for 30 years now. They've also been making dozens and dozens (and dozens) of Kirby sub-games, too.
Let's rank some stuff that, if blown up into its own features, would make you right to say I'm overdoing it.
Squeak Squad is proof of how good the Kirby library is, because it's somewhat unremarkable and yet still plenty of fun.
There are already so many Kirby games, spanning a number of genres. There should be even more Kirby games, though.
There have been more than a few Kirby spin-offs in the last three decades
Kirby's console debut has a history worth exploring, as does its later portable remake.
HAL might mostly focus on Kirby games these days, but Kirby games can be anything.
Kirby doesn't need a mech to defeat his foes, but Kirby got a mech, anyway.
The game that started it all.