Nintendo Switch has added three new games to its Nintendo Switch Online service, Congo’s Caper and Rival Turf! For SNES library and for Pinball NES library. The new additions will be available to Standard and Expansion subscribers, making this the first batch of new content for Standard subscribers since March 30.
Released in Japan in 1984, Pinball for the Nintendo Entertainment System was an early programming project developed by Nintendo’s fourth president Satoru Iwata in collaboration with Satoshi Matsuoka. The game is technically a Mario title, as Mario saves Pauline with his powerful Breakout-esque racket.
Released in 1992 by the now defunct Data East, Congo’s Caper was considered by Nintendo Power to “do nothing that Super Mario World and countless other games have done”. Likewise, 1992’s Rival Turf! comes from the defunct Jaleco and was severely “lowered” by NintendoLife [to Final Fight] in every way imaginable.
Subscribers with a Japanese Nintendo Switch Online account saw another game from 1994 to replace Congo’s Caper – Umihara Kawasa. The game is about playing as a tiny sushi chef in a seemingly terrifying world dominated by sea life, where you use your fishing rod to beat it. cross-platform enemies and challenges with rope physics.
It’s a little hard to get excited about the latest additions, especially when Sony announced its slate of PS Plus Extra and Premium games, which includes a mix of new titles like Escape Academy and heavyweight titles like Assassin’s Creed Origins and the Xbox Game Pass June 2022 list. . Fans on Twitter have continued to push for premium games on the service that have always been portable, with games like Super Mario RPG released by Nintendo.

However, one of the advantages of the Nintendo Switch Online catalog in light of its rivals is that it doesn’t lose titles so easily – as we’ve seen in the nearly four years since the service launched. What’s lacking in quick updates, it seems, makes up for consistency, so you can at least expect Pinball to stick around long enough for you to get your kicks.
Source : The Load Out
