Mighty Beanz
- Go up against a friend owing to the Game Link cable
- Players can unlock rare and Super Pro Beanz and wager them in Battle Mode
- Use special potential-ups to send your opponent’s Beanz spinning
- Free Majesco Gamer Bean included with every game
- For 1 or 2 players
Product Description
Can you help the mixed up Mighty Beanz get themselves together? They’ve spilt apart and scrambled and it’s up to you to match the right tops with the right bottoms. The more you match, the more Mighty Beanz points you get. Unlock rare and super pro Beanz and wager them in Battle Mode, and use special potential-ups to send your opponent’s Beanz spinning. For 1 or 2 players.
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This game is just terrible terrible terrible. If you want your children to have fun get them a real game. All kids do is get sports meeting they hear alot about when most excellent sports meeting are under rated. Take the Mega Man Battle Network sports meeting (the show Mega man: NT Warrior is based off these game You can be like me and HATE NT Warrior and still like this game)MMBN 4 Is coming out this coming week (June 28) And I will tell you it is fun for all ages. It is a game me and my friends have been waiting 4 (pun intended) for close to a year now. I can asure your children will like it over Mighty beanz
Rating: 1 / 5
iF YOU LOVE GAMES YOU GOTTA GET THIS.DONT GET MORE OF THE SAME OLD MARIO GAMES!!!THUMBS UP.
Rating: 5 / 5
I can’t stop playing this game……………. It started to be asinine and I would say I am not that it to this game, and I would find my self goin gback for more, and Now any free time I am playing…. My 5 year ancient cryed the first time she played it, she said it was 2 hard. Now she can get to level 4 which is not high but splendid for her. She also likes the game.
Rating: 5 / 5
This is, by far, the greatest Game Boy Advance game I have ever played, even though I’ve played Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories and all the latest Pokemon sports meeting.
The graphics are splendid. They’re even better than the graphics on some PlayStation sports meeting! The sound is awesome, too. Though the Game Boy Advance is somewhat limited in the sound area, this game rises above that.
It has incredible replayability, too. Even after you’ve “collected” all of the Beanz, you’ll want to keep playing the time trials and puzzles…yes, it’s that fun!
It’s extremely fun to play. Whether you’re in Time Trial or Puzzle mode, the goal is always to match the Bean tops and bottoms, though the layout and way of doing so is different between the two modes.
By and large, this game is splendid, just very underrated. It could be really well loved if more people knew about it – maybe even as well loved as the real-life Beanz.
If you have a kid who likes Mighty Beanz and/or puzzle sports meeting, certainly consider getting this game for him/her. No knowledge of Mighty Beanz is required to play. Also, if you’re not an adult, consider getting this game for yourself.
It’s very fun, and very worth the low price!
Rating: 5 / 5
Life, why must you always throw new challenges in our path? Why do you force us to spend our time on activities that we do not delight in and that do not get us anywhere? Why, indeed, are we driven to inflicting mental agony on ourselves, to warp our brain and numb our mind, aware of it every painful step, yet unable to resist? Why must we let ourselves be knocked down, trodden upon, only to scramble back up and question for more? Why, dear God, why am I playing this atrocity of a puzzle game called Mighty Beanz?
Because I can’t stop myself, that’s why. Every spare minute at work, the image of beans being shuffled around a square playing field pops in my mind. While dodging Dutch traffic in my beat-up French minivan, I’m humming the horrible social class tune to myself. As I draw ever closer to my computer, anticipation builds, and shows in the shaking of my hands and a relentless urge to salivate. Family and friends go forgotten, dinner ruins untouched on the table, as I slam the door behind me, ascend the stairs with a determined stride, lock myself in my room, keep my dialogue box fully blinded…and play Mighty Beanz.
Some might argue, seeing the headache-inducing repetition of the game, the dizzying and mesmerizing moving around of top and bottom halves of beans in an attempt to match up the right ones, the ridiculous ease of the first levels and the wacky and uncontrolled increase of difficulty later on, that whoever is behind this cruel title has made a deal with the devil. In person, I reflect he *is* the devil. Has to be; never has a game been so sadistically terrible and impossible to place down at the same time. The whole concept of the game consists of halves of beans in the shape of people falling down into the playing field, and having to switch them with each other to match up each top half with the right bottom half, causing both to be removed from the playing field. In the meantime, of course, the game liberally tosses new ones onto the field, hoping to be quicker than you are in cleaning them up. Both the alacrity with which this happens and how many different kinds of beans there are scales up per level, and scales up from pathetically simple to “oh God, why hast Thou forsaken me” in about ten minutes, tops. The bizarre result is that in the first level, you can sit and watch while the bean parts entering the screen automatically fall into the right position, and you win without in fact doing anything. Whereas just a few levels later, you are effective yourself in a furious sweat, moving beans around quicker than the eye can see, hoping to get enough matches in the small time you have. Heck, sometimes the best results are achieved just by moving entire rows around randomly and living off the accidental matches this inevitably causes. Such is the life of a player of Magic Beanz.
The fact that you can only switch two bean parts with each other, or go a bean part horizontally, often results in the perplexing situation where you have a top and bottom apart lined up, but can’t in fact stack them. What also doesn’t help is that on 9 out of 10 bean types, the top and bottom parts look absolutely not anything alike. While your cursor hovers over a bean part, a helpful image of the full bean is shown at the side of the screen, but by the time your eyes wander back to the playing field to look for any matches, you’ll have forgotten again what it looks like. Very few of the beans fit logically together, and more infuriating, a lot match aesthetically with parts of *other* beans. If you go entirely by gut feeling, you can make some splendid matches that the game flat out rejects. Yet you keep playing Mighty Beanz.
The same thing just keeps going on and on. A few “potential-ups” are available by making a bean match in a specific spot lighting up for maybe three seconds, but only one of them, the ability to stop new bean parts from falling down for a couple of seconds, is of any practical use. There seems to be no rhyme or reason to the arrival of new parts, anyway. Sometimes it’s silent for half a minute, and sometimes 20 of them arrive at once. Especially in the later levels, the game constantly manages to confuse and set back you with this and make your frantic attempts to line up the beans even more futile. Resolution concentration is required, and not contracted. The whole thing seems to be programmed particularly to make you lose. And when the Game Over screen appears, you start another game of Mighty Beanz.
So why not just place it aside and play something worthwhile? Something with more depth, more game modes, and less migraine and frustration? Excellent luck! Once you’ve played Mighty Beanz, you will find the thought of quitting alien and inconceivable. You must play it again. Your blood sings for it, your heart pounds at the thought of not being able to anymore, well meant suggestions from friends to sell your cart on eBay will result in bouts of unrestrained violence. How dare they! If you want to play a game that sucks that is *your* affair and yours alone! And you return to playing Mighty Beanz.
By all that’s excellent and holy, steer clear of this game. It will take control of your life, of all your gaming, and reduce your once illustrious and many-faceted leisure activity to a mockery of itself, an endless string of unholy torment, of wailing and suffering, of gnashing of teeth and clattering of handcuffs, of matching up beans over and over and over again. No matter what you do, wherever you go, heed my advice, dear wanderer: never, ever, play Mighty Beanz. I’m off to play Mighty Beanz.
Rating: 1 / 5
my boys are so into mighty beanz and a busy collecting anything and everything mighty beanz. like most other kids in the school yard. aways playing mighty beanz