An irresistible Sonic Team puzzler about guiding mice through arrow tiles. The levels are brilliantly designed and multiplayer triggers fits of laughter. A warm and clever success.
Your verdict
Category
Puzzle1 player3+
Description
Mice try to reach a rocket while avoiding cats in this revolutionary Sonic Team online puzzle for Dreamcast. Published by Sega, released in the United States in March 2000. Mouse-guiding puzzle in revolutionary online multiplayer mode, varied arenas, solo and competitive modes. American version.
ChuChu Rocket! review
3/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Polished"
3/5
Music
★★★★★
"Memorable"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Masterful"
Laying arrows to steer mice toward your rocket looks childish, until four players sabotage the plan in real time. From that crystal-clear premise springs a gleeful chaos where everything is decided in a heartbeat. The solo puzzle mode stays clever, but it's in multiplayer that the formula erupts. Visually minimalist, hence timeless, and unbeatable for livening up an evening.
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Steering swarms of mice toward rockets by laying arrows sounds harmless, until four players start sabotaging everything in a hilarious frenzy. Reversals fly thick and fast and nobody stays calm for long. A brilliant Sonic Team idea, this twitchy puzzle is one of the console's multiplayer high points.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Guiding mice toward rockets by laying down arrows seems harmless, until the board goes wild and a single direction flips the whole match. The solo puzzles string together in short bites while multiplayer descends into hilarious chaos, instantly relaunching the next round. Minimalist and twitchy, this brain-teaser keeps a streak of madness that's as contagious as ever.
The NTSC release of ChuChu Rocket! had a similar SegaNet distribution, but stays more accessible than the PAL boxed version on the US market. Collector value mostly comes from the distinctive US sleeve and from its status as one of the flagship online Dreamcast titles in the West.
Is ChuChu Rocket! still worth playing in 2026?
A small Sonic Team miracle, ChuChu Rocket pairs snappy puzzles with multiplayer chaos in disarmingly elegant fashion. Placing arrows to herd mice into the rocket while shoving cats onto rivals triggers immediate laughter, especially with four players. The solo puzzles are genuinely well calibrated. Visually minimal yet very readable, the game has barely aged and remains an excellent gateway for light, frantic local evenings around the console.