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I Love Katamari
I Love Katamari Art
Developer(s) Namco
Platform(s) iOS, Windows Phone 7, Android
Release date December 14, 2008
Genre(s) Third-person puzzle-action
Mode(s) Single-player
Rating(s) Apple: 4+

I Love Katamari is a third-person puzzle-action video game] published by Namco for iOS. It is a continuation of the Katamari Damacy series of games. It was released worldwide in the App Store on . In 2010 Namco announced a Windows Phone 7 version of the game. A version was released for Android in 2012 exclusively for Samsung Android devices. In this game, the King of the Cosmos instructs the game's protagonist — the Prince — to gather as many objects as possible to grow a highly-adhesive ball called a Katamari large enough so that he can pick up special objects to bring to the King so that he can regain his memory.

The gameplay is identical to that of Katamari Damacy, where the player rolls a highly-adhesive ball called a Katamari, collecting various objects of increasing size until it becomes large enough to transform into a star. The game utilizes the specialized technology from the iPhone and iPod Touch in which players tilt the device to move the Katamari across the playing field. I Love Katamari received mixed reviews. While it has been praised for its game presentation, it has also been criticized for performance and control issues. The performance and control issues were improved in an update, but not entirely fixed.

Gameplay[]

I Love Katamari gameplay

Gameplay of I Love Katamari

In I Love Katamari, the player controls a highly–adhesive ball called the katamari. The object is to make the katamari as large as possible by running over and collecting objects of increasing size. The more objects players collect, the larger the katamari becomes. One reviewer described the game as follows: "Basically, the object is to roll a ball around a level and pick up as much junk as you can to make the ball bigger. It sounds lame, but it’s fun to play and kind of addicting." Instead of using analog controllers to control the katamari as in the home console Katamari games, players roll the katamari by tilting the iPhone/iPod Touch in the direction they want the katamari to go. The goal is to collect specific objects requested by the King of the Cosmos within a specified time limit.

Reception[]

I Love Katamari has received some praise and some criticism from various reviewers. While some reviewers, such as Nicole Lee from CNET praised the game for its intuitive usage of the iPhone/iPod Touch technology, other reviewers such as Luke Plunkett from Kotaku and Levi Buchanan from IGN have heavily criticized the game for its lack of responsiveness in controls and handling of the katamari as well as software lag that could cause the game to freeze. Namco Bandai released an update for the game, improving some performance and control problems previously experienced by users.

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