Game Revolution writes: "n its original incarnation, N was a deceptively simple little Flash game: move left, move right, and jump! Little nimble ninja characters that were scarcely more than stick-figures. Your choice of black, white, with specks of red and yellow for graphics. Bonus ninja-worthy injuries, as a result of banging your head against the nearest wall at the frustratingly-compelling, addictive gameplay.
The modestly-named N+ is exactly what it sounds like: N, but more of it-not straying far from the original, not futzing too much with the formula, not fixin' what ain't broke. You run your little guys around various straightforward, amusingly-creative or just flat-out crazy labyrinthine levels, via a surprisingly responsive physics engine-it even takes a second to reverse direction when you're running. You collect gold to extend your life-span, pounce on switches to open doors and reach the exit, wall-jump to reach tucked-away rewards or to avoid threats like mines, ninja-seeking missiles, and even the old-reliable, workaday threat of plummeting to your death."
The Never Yak recently had the idea that everyone who works with Nintendo Link should write a small piece on their favorite game soundtracks, and this is such a fun and eclectic collection.
N++ by Metanet Software is one of the greatest platformers of all time. Don't believe us? Check out Jason Capp's Nindie Spotlight to find out why!
"In all, 131 games were speedrun, and the vast majority of these events included the current record holder for fastest time. One runner, Krankdud, came away with world record times in both of their events: Mega Man Zero 2 on Sunday and a cooperative run in N++ with AND4H on Wednesday.
Here are, in chronological order, 10 of the best runs over the past week" - Owen S. Good, Polgyon
the problem with GDQ is that nintendo has too much space and playstation games are not so prominent