

The rarity of your findings is displayed in a separate items menu, and you could spend many hours attempting to find the lot. Kleptomaniacs will quite enjoy the Rubrub room rocks can be found all over the place, and these can be collected and hauled back to the Clubhouse for "Rubrub", which means to wear rocks down until they reveal their contents, usually in the form of some kind of gem. Less fun and slightly fruity is the dress-up mode you can purchase accessories from boutiques all over the game world, then visit the photographers, dress up your hamsters in bow-ties and antlers and have their portraits taken in their new garb - the results can be saved as new wallpaper for the main menu. There's the catch-paper-on-a-stick game, the roll-balls-at-balloons game and a Pairs-type game which has Bijou and Hamtaro digging up symbols and trying to match them up. For a start, you can visit the funfair and for a princely sum of five sunflower seeds have a shot at winning some prizes.
HAMTARO HAM HAMS UNITE SOUNDTRACK FREE
Thankfully, you're able to tackle more than one task at once in more than one location at once, so you're quite free to leave a puzzle and come back to it later - perhaps moving on to a different task will yield the solution you need to solve it.Īpart from the main adventure, you'll come across a small variety of side activities. You'll come up against apparent dead-ends occasionally, but burrowing your way through them comes with patience and the will power to simply try everything. Usually it's down to just chatting to each and every hamster you come across until you stumble across a likely word, or trying every word you can think of on everything until you happen up the right one - again, a lot like Monkey Island. The steeper tasks come when there are obvious holes in your vocabulary which need filling in order to progress. This is typical of the kind of problem you'll come across in Ham-Ham Heartbreak, but some of the 20 different problems you'll need to solve are much, much more bizarre.

Usually, you'll end up resolving conflicts between couples by revealing some kind of scheme put together by Spat to confuse and upset individual hamsters, like the time he dressed up as one poor girl's boyfriend and ripped her favourite scarf. So off you trot, setting about righting Spat's wrongs and banishing him from whatever location he pops up in, all the while spreading a little love wherever you can and mending those broken hearts. It's down to the adorable couple to save relationships as the evil hamster Spat goes on a heart breaking rampage, destroying love and ruining lives wherever he can, and to do this you'll quite often need to collaborate with your furry belle. However, since the game's premise is love and partnership, many of Hamtaro's new words are for use in partnership with another hamster - Hamtaro's better half, Bijou. The best way to describe it is sort of like an extension of Monkey Island's basic set of verbs with which you can perform a myriad of tasks, as long as you can figure out the best way to go about it.

He can then use these words via a context-sensitive action menu that displays the relevant action in any given situation, and it's up to you to decide how best to use them. Our fuzzy chum picks up his vocabulary from conversations with other hamsters in the game world which he can then put to use resolving situations and solving puzzles. For those of you that missed it, the game revolves around our ham-hero Hamtaro and his carefully assembled dictionary of Hamspeak.

It's not a huge surprise to find that Nintendo has barely tweaked the fine game design from Ham-Hams Unite! for Hamtaro's GBA debut. But with that review now consigned to the ether thanks to the march of technology, we look to a new title to champion the EG ranks of Best Hamster Adventure Game Ever. Nintendo had a surprise hit with Eurogamer back in February when Ham-Hams Unite! arrived on the GBC.
