Overall, was actually quite an enjoyable experience and only took about an hour to master. Hope you get as many lives as you can from the bonus room that pops up every now and then, and you should be set. All this cheevo requires is some decent playing and picking up as many lives wherever you can. I put playthrough in quotes since it was only a little less than half of the game I played through for a second time but you get my point. The other challenge achievement is a bit trickier and required a second “playthrough” of the game for me to get. I got this at around halfway through the game. One of them you earn for reaching 50k points, which shouldn’t be a problem at all if you don’t use your continue. 14 of the achievements are the compulsory 14 for completing every level in the game, with the extra two being pretty simple little challenge achievements. You do have one continue, but as long as you keep your energy high and make use of the parasol when needed, you shouldn’t need to use it.Īs for the set, this one is very simple. Once you reach ¾ full, however, their parasol turns into an extremely useful little tool you can use to just completely float across some of the tight platforming this game throws at you, which actually makes this game manageable at times lmao. I found myself dying countless times due to how just awful it is. For most of Hanbee’s energy, their parasol is incredibly useless and is much more of a detriment than it is useful. Henbee gains energy from consuming food littered around each level and loses energy when attacking, parasailing, or getting damaged. Henbee has a little parasol he uses to woosh around the world that varies from being extremely useful to utterly dogshit depending on how much energy Henbee has. There are 14 levels which cycle through settings with each new iteration adding various obstacles, enemies, and mechanics. ![]() Not particularly good, not particularly bad, and just kinda lives in a stasis of existing. Regardless of what the source material is, at the end of the day Parasol Henbee is nothing more than your standard licensed Game Boy game. I think it’s some Japanese media from the 80s/90s where some Charlie Brown look-alike (they even have a damn Woodstock clone in the cover art) goes around doing whatever young boys did around Japan in the 90s with a silly little parasol. ![]() And, after playing this game, I still don’t really understand what it is. As a lady from the United States born in the early 2000s, I knew absolutely jackshit about what a “Parasol Henbee” was going into this.
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