This micro puzzle tests your visual memory. You have to watch three caged birds switch places with empty cages. The top number tells you how many times the cages are going to be switched.
In this puzzle you are presented with a series of pictures and sounds. After you see and hear the pattern one time you need to reproduce it in the reverse order.
This puzzle shows players two pictures. The one on top is complete and you have to fill in the missing elements on the bottom picture by dragging pieces like the large bird in the correct place. This puzzle can get trickier when it flips the bottom image upside down.
See the sequence of shapes on the top part of the screen? Dogs with different shapes over their heads pop out of holes and you need to hit dogs holding the target shapes. If you hit a dog with the wrong shape it’s game over.
This is a visual puzzle where the sides of an incomplete cube rotate. You need to select the correct partial cube out of the four choices.
Four animated pictures are shown together, but one of them is slightly different. You have to watch the pictures carefully and spot which one is unlike the other three.
In this visual puzzle you need to select the correct viewing angle that matches the picture on the left hand side.
This is the most innovative puzzle I’ve played so far. Through the Wii remote’s speaker you are given a list of orders to memorize. After five or six orders you have to select which items to prepare. Remember when I said you need to have a good grasp of Japanese to enjoy Wii de Yawaraka Atama Juku? Without it there is no way you will be able to complete this game.
Published: Apr 30, 2007 10:50 pm