Marble Maid Review (Nintendo Switch OLED)

Our Marble Maid Review introduces us to a hardcore challenge that makes you work hard for its naughty unlockables. Fill a gallery with saucy images as you progress through more than 50 stages across worlds themed for different parts of the mansion, from living rooms and kitchens to bathrooms and darkened halls! Every 10 stages will also lead to an exciting showdown with your nemesis and frenemy, Nega Maid! Are you willing to get a little dirty to clean things up?

Marble Maid Review Pros:

  • Anime graphics.
  • 168MB download size.
  • Touchscreen controls.
  • Platformer racing gameplay.
  • Tutorial signs.
  • Open hub area where you can go around and select levels.
  • Has a Monkey Ball feel to it all.
  • Unlock naughty images of the ladies.
  • Each level has you collecting Bunnies to open the exit, all against time.
  • You play in a ball and roll around and you can jump and charge up a speed burst.
  • Can replay levels.
  • Speedrun mode.
  • Hidden Collectibles.
  • Different floor types affect the movement.

Marble Maid Cons:

  • Difficult especially with the timer as its game over when it hits zero.
  • Cannot rebind controls.
  • Overly sexualized images for little game purposes.
  • No online leaderboards.
  • Movement takes a bit of getting used to.

Related Post: Watcher Chronicles Review (Nintendo Switch OLED)

Marble Maid:

Official website.

Developer: Shady Corner

Publisher: eastasiasoft

Store Links – 

Nintendo

  • 7/10
    Graphics - 7/10
  • 6/10
    Sound - 6/10
  • 6/10
    Accessibility - 6/10
  • 7/10
    Length - 7/10
  • 7/10
    Fun Factor - 7/10
6.6/10

Summary

Marble Maid is a Monkey Ball-style game where you roll around in a ball and race against the clock to collect the bunnies and exit the level. Your goal is to unlock naughty pictures of ladies and also unlock new levels. It’s all very basic and to be honest the actual playing of the game is the weakest part, The art of the ladies is fine but apart from the obvious, It serves no point. I didn’t particularly enjoy my time with the game and nor was it particularly memorable. If you must get more Monkey Ball style gameplay then fine or if you are so starved you need the images then fine but otherwise is a no.

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!