A multiplayer-focused WarioWare microgame compilation on GameCube. Wild idea, execution dead-on with the series spirit, short and hilarious rounds. Not the deepest entry but the couch vibe is unbeatable. A small gem barely known in Europe.
Your verdict
Category
Party / Minigame4 players3+
Description
The player participates in crazy mini-games in this Japanese Made in Wario for GameCube. Published by Nintendo, released in Japan in October 2003. Party game with WarioWare's frantic mini-games including 5-second challenges, varied characters and absurd humour.
Atsumare!! Made in Wario review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
★★★★★
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Hundreds of micro-games lasting mere seconds, fired off at a frantic pace, in an avalanche of absurd ideas: you can't guess what's coming, and that's the whole point. With several players, panic and fits of laughter are guaranteed from the first round. Delirious, unpredictable, irresistible: the most bonkers party game around.
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,59 GB📅17/10/2003
Published by Nintendo
Atsumare!! Made in Wario (GameCube) price, value & rarity
Atsumare!! Made in Wario is the original Japanese edition of WarioWare Inc Mega Party Game$, distributed by Nintendo with a signed domestic sleeve and the Atsumare subtitle unique to the Japanese market. Collector value comes from that unique nomenclature and from the colourful sleeve characteristic of Japanese Wario productions.
Better with friends
An avalanche of microgames blasted through in seconds, spun here into a string of festive modes for four. Joyful chaos reigns: you chain absurd challenges back to back, snatch victory from each other and howl with laughter at the baffling prompts. An ideal party game, it's grasped in an instant, leaves no one on the bench and guarantees evenings as unpredictable as they are hilarious.
Is Atsumare!! Made in Wario still worth playing in 2026?
A multiplayer adaptation of WarioWare's mad micro game concept, Mega Party Games on GameCube turns the Game Boy Advance solo formula into a mini game festival around the TV. The frantic pace, the absurd humour and the variety of few second challenges make it an excellent proposition for an evening with friends. Solo is shorter than the GBA base but multiplayer largely makes up for it. For anyone who loves quick and unpredictable party games, a recommendation as joyful as it is memorable.