A Boy and His Blob (2009)

WayForward

Remake of A Boy and His Blob: Trouble on Blobolonia

Android · Linux · Mac · Nintendo Switch · PC (Microsoft Windows) · PlayStation 3 · PlayStation 4 · PlayStation Vita · Wii · Xbox One · iOS

3.15 from 130 ratings

929 members have it in their collection · 10 playing now · 516 backlogged · 94 wish listed

How long? Main story 11h · 100% 26h (from 2 logged playthroughs)

When Blobolonia is threatened by an evil Emperor, the blob comes to Earth looking for help. Instead, he finds a young boy. Help the blob dethrone the evil Emperor that's terrorizing Blobolonia and establish a friendship with the blob that will last a lifetime.
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Details

Developers
WayForward
Publishers
Majesco Entertainment, Midnight City
Genres
Adventure, Platform, Puzzle
Themes
Action
Series
A Boy and His Blob
Steam
View on Steam

Release dates

  • Oct 13, 2009 (North_America) Wii
  • Nov 06, 2009 (Europe) Wii
  • Nov 12, 2009 (Australia) Wii
  • Jan 19, 2016 (Worldwide) Linux, Mac, PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 4
  • Jan 19, 2016 (Australia) PlayStation Vita
  • Jan 19, 2016 (Europe) PlayStation Vita
  • Jan 20, 2016 (Worldwide) Xbox One
  • Jan 21, 2016 (North_America) PlayStation Vita
  • Jun 28, 2016 (Worldwide) PlayStation 3
  • Sep 26, 2017 (Worldwide) Android
  • Nov 17, 2017 (Worldwide) iOS
  • Nov 04, 2021 (Europe) Nintendo Switch
  • Nov 04, 2021 (North_America) Nintendo Switch
  • TBD (Worldwide) Linux
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Rating distribution

5 stars
11
4 stars
30
3 stars
58
2 stars
29
1 star
2
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Community All Reviews Statuses

Ivanchez

Review Ivanchez 2/5 · Apr 16, 2019

A boy and his (Hey) Blob

A boy and his blob is platform/puzzle(?) game in which the main mechanic is using bean to transform your ally and friend Blob to get to the goal of a level and finally save the world from some black gooey enemies.

I will start with the positive aspects of the games.

First of all, Blob is cute and you have …

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A boy and his blob is platform/puzzle(?) game in which the main mechanic is using bean to transform your ally and friend Blob to get to the goal of a level and finally save the world from some black gooey enemies.

I will start with the positive aspects of the games.

First of all, Blob is cute and you have a action to hug him :)

The mechanics are interesting and you have multiple abilities to use and different abilities can be used to solve the same puzzle.

The art matches with the concept of the game and is really simplistic.

It is a relaxing game that you can simply play through and get it done quickly or if you are like me try to 100% complete it (which isn't that hard to achieve, but there is some challenge to it)

Here comes the negative aspects and the reason why I gave it a 2/5

The puzzle are just to easy and sometimes it feels like they are not well designed at all. For example some of the puzzles is to kill enemies preventing you from advancing. You have a skill to turn Blob into a ball and roll it towards the enemies to kill them. There is no challenge at all and it would have been the same by adding or not adding this kind of puzzles, they just felt like fillers.

The history is very weak. Everything is narrated through actions and there is no dialog. This isn't so bad since the history is not a core aspect of the game.

The game gives you too many hints to solve the puzzles, even when you have progressed more than 50% of the game, which is totally unnecessary. The hints remove any challenge and thought process from the player.

There is a way to cheat the game. Ideally you would have blob go somewhere with a bean, perform and action, such as activate a switch so that you can progress and then you would have to find a way to get Blob to your side. You can just spam the "call" action which after certain numbers of times used will turn Blob into a balloon, which for some reason is able to pass through walls and get next to you. There is actually a bean to turn Blob into a balloon, but I never used it since I could just cheat my way through by calling him. I think it would have made the game more challenging and fun if you had to find a way to feed this bean into Blob so he could get to you.

The boss battles were tedious and boring. If you died you had to watch the cinematics everytime and you could skip them.

Each level would give you a set of beans. Some beans are more interesting, powerful and fun to use. I would have liked that you unlocked the better beans as you progressed through the game and not have random beans assigned to you per level. I think this would have given the player more flexibility to solve the puzzles instead of just having a set and knowing that you have to use what you were given to solve a puzzle. Also logically it doesn't make sense that in one level you have a bean and in the next you don't have it anymore and later you get it back. It seems like a lazy game design from the creators.

Conclusion

A boy and his Blob is an Ok game. You will have some fun playing but if you will find some flaws while playing it. There are definitely better platform/puzzles games that are better designed and more challenging. I could recommend this game for a younger audience as an introduction too platform/puzzle games.

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anarchistica

Review anarchistica 2/5 · Feb 6, 2019

Slouching towards Blobolonia

This is a slow, simplistic game with crappy controls and a tedious "call Blob" element. You walk across a level until you reach an obstacle. Using the clumsy rotating menu (it's not like there's dozens of keys on my keyboard) you pick the required power and blob becomes a ladder, parachute, portal, trampoline, etc. And then you have to stand …

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This is a slow, simplistic game with crappy controls and a tedious "call Blob" element. You walk across a level until you reach an obstacle. Using the clumsy rotating menu (it's not like there's dozens of keys on my keyboard) you pick the required power and blob becomes a ladder, parachute, portal, trampoline, etc. And then you have to stand still and call Blob using one of half a dozen lines they recorded for this. If you're particularly lucky you also have to drop him a bean so he can turn into a balloon first.

You slouch your way towards the exit, gathering trophies for your house along the way. There's no flow to the game and it could easily have been improved if Blob stayed close to you and didn't have to be summoned constantly. Also the music is atrocious and i turned it off after about half a minute. The game doesn't have volume sliders either, because this is a lazily designed product.

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FredLobster

Review FredLobster 4/5 · Feb 11, 2013

An unexpected remake of one of the NES' most memorable (yet unplayably flawed) titles, A Boy and His Blob is a kid-friendly puzzle platformer in which you control a boy who must fight off an alien invasion with the help of an amorphous blob of adorable and a bag full of jellybeans. Although the boy can do little more than …

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An unexpected remake of one of the NES' most memorable (yet unplayably flawed) titles, A Boy and His Blob is a kid-friendly puzzle platformer in which you control a boy who must fight off an alien invasion with the help of an amorphous blob of adorable and a bag full of jellybeans. Although the boy can do little more than jump, run, climb, and shove things around, you can feed the blob jelly beans to turn it into a wide variety of useful tools. Each level involves using the available beans to help you and the blob reach the exit (while collecting loot for unlockables along the way).

As a kid's game, most of the puzzles are straightforward and simple, though the bosses are all very cleverly designed and the extra stages can be challenging. That being said, the real appeal of the game is in the artwork and music. The game is gorgeously animated, and even though it's well suited to a TV show for 2-year-olds, the music is incredibly relaxing. Although not the most compelling title for the Wii, it's easy to appreciate it as an act of love for an obsolete game, and it's something you can play in front of the kids and still honestly enjoy.

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