So I went to the future and read IGN's review of Kirby Wii. Looks like it's not worth it:
[quote]The Kirby series has had quite a few ups and downs since Kirby 64, her first game, released back in 2003. The pink ball's had a bit of a rough run, stuck with several mediocre games and only two really big hits: Canvas Curse on the DS and the recent Wii success, Kirby's Epic Yarn. But was Kirby's newest platforming attempt worth the several month wait? Probably not.
Kirby's Epic Yarn combined the character's two biggest selling points – her cute looks and her affinity towards knitting equipment – and gave us a platformer that was both challenging and adorable. Kirby Wii, unfortunately, throws all that out the window. When I popped the disk into my wii, I wondered right off the bat how the people who made Epic Yarn could also be behind this strange deviation from Kirby's usual, cloth-filled style. This game is obviously a quick money-grab going off the popularity of Epic Yarn, seeing as how it was released not even a year later, and it shows. Instead of the polished yarn graphics Kirby fans know and love, we're stuck with a style that seems taken straight from Super Smash Bros. Brawl. While brawl's style was definitely not bad, the game wasn't made of yarn so it wasn't really great, either.
Kirby Wii also has a brand new gameplay style from Epic Yarn's. Instead of the single jump and yarn whip we all know and love, Kirby is stuck floating and inhaling – obvious references to the Super Smash Bros. series. Actually, a lot of Kirby Wii's ideas seem to be inspired by the Super Smash Bros. games. Kirby even transforms by copying powers, just like in Smash, instead of the more Kirby-esque gameplay from epic yarn. Some of these transformations, like Link Kirby, were taken directly from Super Smash Bros. Meta Knight and King Dedede, two smash characters who inexplicably appeared in Epic Yarn, return in Kirby Wii, but more well known Kirby characters, like Prince Fluff and Dom Woole, are left out for no well-explored reason.
Two player co-op – one of the few parts of Epic Yarn that were actually kept in this game – is handled quite a bit differently. Player two has the option of playing either as a “helperâ€







