Skip to main content

You need to buy the best Wii U game before the eShop closes down

If you’re a Nintendo fan, you should pull out your calendar and put a big red circle around March 27. That’s the day that both the Nintendo 3DS and Wii U eShop will officially shutter their doors. It’ll be your last chance to pick up digital copies of all digital games, from Virtual Console classics to first-party exclusives.

There is no shortage of good games worth picking up before that deadline happens, though some of the systems’ best titles can be purchased on other platforms. There’s one game in particular, though, that finds itself in a precarious position: Affordable Space Adventures. If you even have a passing interest in the Wii U exclusive, you’ll have to act fast, because it’ll go fully extinct at the end of the month.

Nintendo eShop - Affordable Space Adventures Trailer

Affordable Space Adventures is an indie game created by Swedish developer Nicklas Nygren. Unlike many indies released on the Wii U, it’s never been ported to another platform. That’s because it’s one of the rare games that actually dared to take advantage of the system’s two-screen premise. That makes it arguably the best game on the platform period, as it’s a true showcase of how the Wii U gamepad could create innovative experiences.

As its name implies, Affordable Space Adventures is about a galactic tourist who buys a cheap trip to the stars. Naturally, that shakes out about as well as you’d expect and they’re stranded in space piloting a rickety ship. On the TV, the game plays out as a standard 2D puzzler where players have to navigate their ship around lasers, aliens, and more hazards.

Indie Game Affordable Space Adventures
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The unique trick, though, is that the Wii U gamepad acts as the ship’s control panel. By using the touch screen, players manage all of the ship’s functions while traveling around. Some of those are simple, like controlling the ship’s scanner or deploying landing gear. Others are more complex, putting a unique systems management experience in the middle of a puzzle game. Players have to keep track of meters like heat and electricity, fiddling with their two engines to make sure the ship runs smoothly at all times. It’s a tactile experience that really puts players in the cockpit without switching to a first-person perspective.

When it comes to Wii U games, Affordable Space Adventures is almost in a class of its own. It’s the rare game for the system that understood how a second screen could be transformative. Most games on the platform didn’t quite know what to do with the gamepad, throwing menus or maps on it. Even Nintendo seemed to give up on the idea by the end of the console’s lifespan, not utilizing it at all. Affordable Space Adventures both highlighted how unique and underutilized it was. To this day, I haven’t had as much fun with the system as I did dialing down by decelerator to keep my ship from bursting into flames.

Affordable Space Advntures is displayed on a Wii U gamepad and TV.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Unfortunately, the indie gem’s unbridled creativity is ending on a bittersweet note. Due to the fact that it was specifically built for the Wii U, it was never ported to another system. And how could it be? The entire experience hinges on an oddball tech gimmick that was a commercial failure for Nintendo. With no physical release to keep it alive, Affordable Space Adventures dies with the eShop on March 27 — a devastating blow to video game preservation.

So consider this something of a PSA: If you want to give it a try, get your Wii U out of storage and blow the dust off it as soon as you can. You only have a few weeks to play an excellent indie that’s about to be lost to time.

Topics
Giovanni Colantonio
Giovanni is a writer and video producer focusing on happenings in the video game industry. He has contributed stories to…
You need to try PlayStation VR2’s most psychedelic game yet
Key art for Akka Arrh shows psychedelic images.

You know that it's a busy year for gaming when a project by an industry legend launches with hardly any fanfare. That's exactly what happened in February 2023 with Akka Arrh. Created by Jeff Minter and his eccentric studio Llamasoft, the neon-tinted shooter is a remake of a 1982 Atari game that never saw the light of day after being deemed too difficult. Minter got the greenlight to revive the project, bringing it to life as a retro arcade shooter built in his unmistakable style.

While the project was exciting for game historians, it didn't exactly crack into the mainstream (it only has 37 user reviews on Steam). Thankfully, Akka Arrh getting a second chance to shine this week as its new PlayStation 5 version adds PlayStation VR2 support. While that might not be enough to make it a commercial hit, it does give PSVR2 owners a good reason to dust off their headset and check out a delightfully oddball project from one of gaming's true visionaries.
It's a trip
Akka Arrh is the rare example of a game that might be easier to explain on paper than in practice. In this throwback arcade shooter, players control a stationary ship that's tasked with protecting pods from attacking aliens. To fend off foes, players drop bombs that blow up in a different geometric pattern on each level's map. Every time an enemy touches that blast radius, it blows up in the same pattern, chaining to other enemies. The goal is to keep an uninterrupted chain going as long as possible by using a limited number of bullets to knock out foes that can't be destroyed by bombs and grabbing power-ups by hovering the cursor over them.

Read more
If you love retro games, you need to check out this killer Mega Man throwback
The characters of Berserk Boy pose together.

Every year, like clockwork, I end up playing one retro-style 2D game that gets its hooks in me. It's not that I harbor a lot of nostalgia for the Super Nintendo or Sega Genesis; it's just that indie developers have gotten very good at both replicating and modernizing the fun of old-school platformers. So far in the 2020s, I've had a blast with Cyber Shadow, Vengeful Guardian: Moonrider, and now, Berserk Boy.

The debut title from the aptly named BerserkBoy Games, the new retro release is a throwback to classic Mega Man games -- something that's probably clear from its title alone. In it, players shoot their way through colorful 2D stages filled with evil robots, platforming challenges, and special abilities that can help make mincemeat out of bosses. Sound familiar?

Read more
You need to play this charming indie before it leaves PlayStation Plus
Tchia wears a crown in Tchia.

Tchia will leave the PlayStation Plus Premium and Extra game catalog on March 19. And you really need to play this charming open-world adventure that I called "a new coming-of-age classic" in a four-star review before it's gone.

Released in March 2023, Awaceb and Kepler Interactive's Tchia is an open-world indie adventure heavily inspired by The Legend of Zelda titles like Breath of the Wild and The Wind Waker. It stands out by transporting players to a world inspired by the Pacific islands of New Caledonia and immersing them in its vibrant culture and mythology while telling a captivating coming-of-age story.

Read more