

There is a decent amount of customisation options for making a level suitable for the number of worms you want on the map and the number of teams playing. Multiplayer matches are where most hours of this game are usually spent, whether it’s sharing the same screen (you can use split joy cons) wirelessly across Switches, or online. It is still too much fun listening to all the different worm voices they have, I found it hard to choose between the Bob Ross inspired Artist voice and the old newsreel voice, amongst a handful of others. A lot of this content is accessible upfront which is great if you’re looking to jump right into battles with your specially picked team of worm warriors. You can choose their outfit (the only way you’ll be playing as Yooka or Laylee on the Switch in 2017), voices, victory dances and music, headstones and forts. One of the fun parts of any Worms game is making your team, which has always provided plenty of customisation options well beyond just naming your scrappy team of soldiers. It might sound simple, but throw in fully destructible terrain, wind direction which impacts how your shots carry across the field, figuring out how much power to put behind that grenade throw, and working out how some of the wackier weapons work without turning yourself into a crater in the ground. Your wisecracking team of Worms go up against another (either PvP, the AI or both), using a wide variety of weapons to fire across the battlefield, sending your opponent to the grave. If you haven’t encountered a Worms game before, it’s a turn-based shooter on a 2D plane. After many years trying to find itself, Worms WMD is a return to what made Worms such an enduring series.
WORMS W.M.D CRAFTING VARIANTS FULL
Every few years there would be a new game released looking to shake up the franchise full 3D battlefields, forts, different classes of worms and interactive environments. I remember playing the original on the PC, playing way too much of the Worms 2 demo with friends. First as little pixel sticks of death, to the more commonly seen cartoony worms that adorn every new game.
