Once Soccer Kid appeared as the headline for one of the Evercade collections it was only a matter of time before it made its way onto the Switch. A semi successful attempt at creating a new mascot, the character that started on the Amiga went on to grace a host of platforms from the SNES to the Atari Jaguar and Playstation. What is a little disappointing is that only two versions of the game are included here.
What you have here is the most controllable version of the
game – the Super Nintendo one, and the one with the all the cut scenes – the MS
DOS version. So while that makes sense to some degree it begs the question of
why call this a collection when so many other platforms have been overlooked?
That said, the little dude certainly has something of a cult
following and it’s easy to see why. This can’t hide its Amiga
platformer roots with the loose feeling controls, but the main gimmick helps to
keep it above its peers. We are of course talking about the football that
Soccer Kid uses as his main way of dispatching enemies. Control of it can be a
little tricky to begin with but once you’ve worked out how the momentum of it
works it’s a satisfying experience belting it at the many caricatured people
that inhabit the levels.
While there are only two versions of the games here it doesn’t
mean they have skimped on the general features. All the usual quality of life
features such as rewind and saving are included along with screen filters and borders.
You can even activate various cheat codes. There is a decent gallery as well with
instruction manuals and materials from the other versions of the game not
included. It’s actually far more than most of these collections have.
While the game plays a bit lose it is fun. There are a few
frustrations like too many leaps of faith and not being able to properly look
up or down. This seems like a minor thing until you release that if you really
want to finish the game properly you are going to have to search for football
cards that let you try and reclaim a piece of the missing world cup. Think of
the chaos emeralds in Sonic and you aren’t too far off.
Overall, Soccer Kid is a fun game that we are glad getting
some attention again. It’s release around the World Cup was somewhat inevitable
and we really do love it when games a little more obscure are given the time to
be ported. It’s not perfect by any means but there’s fun to be had here for
those willing to master the controls.
Overall 6/10
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