
However, by the time the initial tutorial level is complete, it becomes glaringly obvious that Sonic Lost World is unlike any Sonic game before it. Looking from the outside in, Sonic Lost World‘s core gamplay mechanics don’t seem to have changed much from those found in Sonic Generations and Sonic Colors. With the fate of Sonic’s home world hanging in the balance, the blue blur has no choice but to team up with his long time rival, make his way across the Lost Hex, and defeat The Deadly Six once and for all. Eggman’s plan is overtaken by six mysterious creatures known collectively as The Deadly Six. Their aim is to free the woodland creatures captured and roboticized by the nefarious Dr. Sonic Lost World sees Sonic and Tails crash land on the Lost Hex a strange, fragmented world comprised of large hexagons and other geometrically pleasing shapes. But does Sonic Lost World have what it takes to hop, skip and jump its way to success, or does it stumble as so many 3D Sonic games have done in the past? In the run up to the game’s release, Sega have made it clear that Sonic Lost World is a bold new chapter in the franchise. Sonic Lost World marks the blue blur’s debut on the Nintendo Wii U, but it’s also the first time the speedy hedgehog has had a fully 3D adventure on the Nintendo 3DS.
