Big Brain Academy Brain Vs Brain Review (Nintendo Switch OLED)

Our Big Brain Academy Brain Vs Brain Review asks the ultimate question, Who has the brawniest brain in your family? Challenge your grey matter to a variety of challenges and find out in Big Brain Academy: Brain vs. Brain.

Big Brain Academy Brain Vs Brain Review Pros:

  • Big bright colorful graphics.
  • 676MB download size.
  • Full touchscreen controls.
  • Two modes of play – solo or party with 2 – 4 players locally.
  • Every player can have their own user/account.
  • Character creator.
  • Friends list leaderboards for each mode.
  • Your profile is set up with birthday, occupation, catchphrase, and greeting.
  • Test game type is where you do a random event from each of the disciplines and get a Brain grade and Big Brain Brawn score.
  • Online game type is where you can play against the world (random), friends, family, and search ghosts.
  • Ghosts are an exact copy of another player’s game they played meaning you can play them offline.
  • Practice mode allows you to play any discipline and any event you want and earn a score and a Bronze Silver or Gold award.
  • Five disciplines – Identify, Memorize, Analyse, compute and visualize.
  • Earn coins from playing any game type and unlock new customisation options for your character.
  • You get a brief tutorial before each event.
  • Clever variations of simple game types.
  • A lot of fun.
  • The type of game you play daily.
  • Simple to learn.

Big Brain Academy Brain Vs Brain Review Cons:

  • Playing with a controller is not ideal mainly due to it feeling slower.
  • No actual live online play.
  • Doesn’t have its own achievements.
  • You only unlock customisation options.
  • Feels more like an arcade experience rather than Brain Train that is an actual exercise.

Related Post: Guardian Of Lore Review (PlayStation 5)

Big Brain Academy Brain Vs Brain:

Official website.

Developer: Nintendo

Publisher: Nintendo

Store Links –

Nintendo Switch OLED

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

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