


While simplicity is the order of the day, it’s clear you’re playing an Aardman game as all three characters, Timmy, Shaun and Shirley look the part, as do the environments you face. To reconstruct this in gaming terms would be far too ambitious and doesn’t translate too well, apart from Wurroom and the untouchable (ahem) ClayFighter.

Looks are what we judge a lot of things on and straight away you’ll notice the aesthetic choice hand-drawn characters and backgrounds rather than digitised stop-motion.Ĭertainly not on par with the studio greats, I’ve dabbled with stop-motion, and it was an absolute ballache. Home Sheep Home Farmageddon Party Edition Switch Review So it is with mild regret that Home Sheep Home Farmageddon Party Edition generated the odd frown which I haven’t experienced in my Aardman spectatorship – from Creature Comforts, Angry Kid through to Shaun the Sheep – it’s a tricky game, but that’s not a bad thing. While the Americans have Disney, the Japanese Studio Ghibli, the British can find solace in a cup of tea, cracking toast and countless sheep. There’s something quite comforting about the Aardman universe – almost a timeless nature about it that never instils the stresses of modern-day life, despite the stories and characters being very much relatable. As per the upcoming physical release, here’s a Home Sheep Home Farmageddon Party Edition Switch review, also available on the Nintendo eShop.
