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Tombi! 2 - Contra los Cerdiablos (Spain)

PlayStation
🇪🇸
Reviewed in
2000
85
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✪ Reviewed on November 3, 2023
78

Tomba! 2 The Evil Swine Return enriches and improves the original with more interconnected zones, varied quests and longer playtime. The first game's magic is preserved with more content. One of PS1's rarest and most expensive platformers on the collector market, justifiably so.

Your verdict
Category
Platformer 1 player 7+
Description
Spanish Whoopee Camp version of Tomba 2 with full localization. Created by Whoopee Camp and Sony Computer Entertainment, released in 2000 in Spain under the Tombi 2 Contra los Cerdiablos title. Semi-open 3D platforming, over a hundred thirty branching missions, transformations into penguin and other animals, full Spanish textual and voiced localization and Harumi Fujita cheerful soundtrack. Spanish edition under the Tombi 2 Contra los Cerdiablos title.

Tombi! 2 - Contra los Cerdiablos review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
3/5
Music
"Memorable"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,18 GB 📅16/06/2000
Published by Sony Computer Entertainment

Tombi! 2 - Contra los Cerdiablos (PS1) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

A 2.5D sequel to the feral boy's adventure, expanding the world and the puzzles while keeping the first's teeming spirit, released in limited runs across all regions. Even rarer in places than the original, it ranks among the console's most coveted platformers. Its desirability rests on this concrete scarcity and the cult status of the Tomba line.

Is Tombi! 2 - Contra los Cerdiablos still worth playing in 2026?

Released in 1999 on PS1 in Japan and in 2000 in the West, Whoopee Camp's project extends Tomba's adventure with a wider world and a more structured quest system. The transformations gain variety, the animal companions bring new moves and the 2D on 3D art direction grows finer. The music keeps its off beat humour. A few cameras and platforming sequences have aged. Recommended today for authorial platformer devotees, for fans of the original entry and for PS1 collectors curious about Tokuro Fujiwara's creative voice after Capcom on Sony's first home console hardware.

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