![]() ![]() The bummer is that there’s no way to choose which version you want to hear, which sucks because I’ve found that most of the original themes are far superior to the overly produced remixes. The first three levels of any world play a newly remixed theme and the last three levels play the original versions. That’s an issue that carries over from the original, but one that Sonic Colors: Ultimate introduces for the first time is related to its remixed soundtrack. This causes the first few hours to be kind of a drag because you’re often forced along paths that are slow and tedious. The one downside to the Wisps is that, because they’re drip fed to you one at a time over the course of the whole game, the first time through the early levels of Sonic Colors isn’t nearly as fun as they are when you’re able to replay them with all the Wisps unlocked. ![]() Unlike the other Wisp powers, it’s never really used in any sort of clever or satisfying way. With it, you can float through walls by pulling yourself to an anchor point, and. The new Ghost Wisp is probably the weakest of the bunch, as it’s really only used to mix up the locations of some hidden Red Rings compared to where they were in the original game. ![]() While these are certainly less exciting than the ones built around speed, they still make exploration and revisiting levels with new powers a lot of fun, as they can help you discover new paths that dramatically change the flow of a level, and even help you improve your time or score. Then there are Wisps more geared toward secret collecting, light-puzzle solving, and platforming. These particular wisps do a great job of varying up the level design without ever slowing Sonic down. ![]() A pink Wisp might give you the opportunity to completely bypass a slow platforming section by zipping up a wall, a Drill Wisp might lead you to a subterranean path that’s way faster than the one above ground, and a Laser Wisp can instantly shoot you across a section lined with enemies, taking them all out at the literal speed of light. There are a total of nine Wisps that you can unlock over the course of Sonic Colors: Ultimate – including a brand-new Ghost Wisp that wasn’t in the original game – and they primarily enhance the two things that are key to a great Sonic game: your speed (duh), and the multiple paths that allow you to find your own way through a level. They’re unlocked as you progress through Sonic Colors, but you can always revisit old levels and replay them with Wisps that you unlocked later on to access new paths, which is something that we’ll circle back to. Pink Wisps can turn you into a Spike Ball that allows you to cling to walls, yellow Wisps turn you into a drill that can dig underground, and teal Wisps turn you into a laser that can bounce off prisms and travel at the speed of light. Think of them as transformation power-ups along the lines of what you’d find in a Mario game, only you get to choose when to activate their powers. These Wisps are the main thing that separate Sonic Colors from every other mainline console Sonic game, both past and present. What is important about the story, however, is that it introduces the Wisps, the small multicolored aliens that Eggman is hunting down. ![]()
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