The direct sequel brings new enemies and even more inventive levels. Slightly more difficult than the first. For Bub and Bob die-hards looking for more content.
Your verdict
Category
Platformer1 player3+
Co-op
Description
Sequel to Bubble Bobble featuring new levels, enemies and more imposing bosses. Published by Taito, released in the USA in 1993. Bub and Bob in new adventures with more varied enemies and fruits to collect. Second Bubble Bobble on Famicom.
Bubble Bobble Part 2 review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
The little dragons return in an adventure with more varied scenery and finer-tuned mechanics: trapping then popping keeps its punch, the pace gains pep. Hunting hidden bonuses and chasing the best chain makes you want to start over again and again. Tender, colourful and peppy, a sequel that extends the fun without watering it down.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Rediscovering the bubble principle in reworked settings with more varied enemies rekindles curiosity from the very first screens. Hunting down hidden passages and chasing a better score sustain a gentle but steady progression. The difficulty sometimes spikes sharply and the formula stays very close to its elder, but the colorful spirit keeps all its pull.
A later US NES release and noticeably rarer than the first entry on the system. The end-of-cycle print, combined with limited marketing exposure against 16-bit heavyweights, turns the US CIB into one of the classic targets among late-NES collectors. Sealed copies hit top numbers on VGA/WATA, and loose cote keeps creeping up for lack of any recent physical alternative.
Is Bubble Bobble Part 2 still worth playing in 2026?
Bubble Bobble Part 2 brings new enemies, even more inventive levels and a slightly higher difficulty. The title keeps the first's grammar, even though the original magic remains tied to its co-op. Released late on NES, the cart is rare and pricey. For Bub and Bob devotees hungry for more content, it is a genuinely satisfying sequel, provided you accept that it does not match the original's shine. For Taito classic fans and bubble platformer lovers, a defensible detour today.