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The game presents 50 mini-games spread across four resorts: beach, city, snow, and mountain. The mini-games are all designed according to their respective resorts, and the variety is certainly admirable. While at the beach resort, you can go scuba div...
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Up until recently, I would say that Wii Sports Resort was easily the best vacation-themed video game on Wii. A new challenger has arrived, however, and takes the formula set by Nintendo with its Wii Sports games and goes absolutely crazy by packing in...
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blogcritics.org Updated: 2012-01-25 05:32:52
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Wii Go Vacation is the latest mini-game collection for the gaming system. Wii Go Vacation follows in the tracks of Wii Sports Resort, Wii Sports, and Wii Party. Go Vacation is very similar to Sports Resort with the location moved from Wuhu Island to Ka...
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gaming-age.com Updated: 2012-01-25 05:32:52
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Go Vacation is a collection of themed mini-games recently released for the Nintendo Wii by Namco Bandai Games. It's a four player affair, featuring a series of games spread across four different resort locations. As far as mini-game compilations go, it...
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gamespot.com Updated: 2012-01-25 05:32:52
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In an ideal world, the term "family vacation" conjures up visions of fun intergenerational activities in a beautiful setting bookended by car trips filled with tasty snacks and merry sing-alongs. Sadly, such trips are more often portrayed as arduous un...
Big resorts encourage exploration, Everything is very accessible, Playing with a group is fun.
Minigames are shallow, Some modes of travel are tiresome, Abundant loading screens.
Go Vacation is a shallow, kid-friendly minigame collection with nice open spaces and overly simplistic games...
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ign.com
Updated: 2012-01-25 05:32:52
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The Wii plays host to more mini-game collections than probably any system in existence. Most of them can only be called cheap cash-ins, but a few examples - specifically Wii Sports and Wii Sports Resort - manage to rise above the sea of mediocrity to p...
Go Vacation evolves the mini-game collection genre in many ways, but it lacks the polish of Nintendo's first party efforts. The open world island, while fun to explore, feels empty because of the lifeless NPCs that haunt its shores. You’ll find plenty...
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A tropical resort paradise overrun by dead-eyed, single-minded creatures that vaguely resemble humans, there shambling movements parodying the utter lifelessness all around them. I am not talking about Techland's Dead Island. This is Go Vacation...
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I don't often go on holiday. Or, vacation, as our American friends call it. It's lovely to get away, of course, but it's also expensive and stressful. More expensive. In fact, how do people afford to travel? I struggle to figure out how people afford food...
Loads of minigames and activities, Small but fun open world resorts, Loads of vehicles to use, Great for multiplayer...
Boring solo, Graphics are dated, Some minigames feel similar to one another...
Go Vacation is an incredibly basic game, in addition to being a seven year old port. But somehow, despite my initial inklings that this was a shovelware game, I actually found myself really enjoying it. I always admire local multiplayer experiences, and I...
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Multiplayer games are something I can't go without. During the Wii era, I hopped from game to game exploring all they had to offer. My family and friends didn't exactly mind as it meant new experiences for them too. One experience that has remained around...
Fantastic for multiplayer, Four resorts and many activities, Improved controls in most cases, Solid music and performance...
A few missing activities
, Initial activity runs boring, Presentation not hugely improved...
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