Mario Party Jamboree + Jamboree TV on the Nintendo Switch 2 is a solid continuation of the franchise, delivering the chaotic fun the series is known for with some genuinely fresh ideas. The boards are creative and unique, offering enough personality to keep things interesting on your first playthrough. The gameplay itself feels polished, and there's a clear effort here to keep the formula from going stale. On paper, it checks a lot of boxes.
The problem is what happens after that first playthrough. Once you've run through a board with your group, there's very little pulling you back to it. That "been there, done that" feeling sets in fast, and the game could really benefit from more maps or at least more variation within the existing ones. For a party game that thrives on replayability, that's a notable shortcoming. You want to keep coming back to the table, but the table doesn't change enough to make that compelling.
On the bright side, the 2v2 online mode is genuinely a blast. Teaming up with a buddy and taking on another duo captures that competitive Mario Party energy in a way that feels fresh and exciting. Unfortunately, the online population is a real issue. Finding a full lobby is a struggle, and more often than not you'll end up matched with only one other human player alongside a CPU — turning what should be a thrilling 2v2 into an awkward 2v1 scenario. It takes the wind out of the sails when the mode's biggest strength is undermined by a lack of players.
Mario Party Jamboree + Jamboree TV is a fun time, especially if you've got friends on the couch or a reliable online partner. But the limited map longevity and sparse online community hold it back from being the definitive Mario Party experience it could be. The party's good — it just needs more rooms and more guests.
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!