Going back to Star Fox 64 before the big Switch 2 remaster isn’t just a nostalgia trip — though, in all honesty, that is half of the fun. Booting up the 1997 classic now, you see why this game still sits near the top of Nintendo’s greatest hits. It’s tight, clean, and knows exactly what it wants to be.
Going Back to Star Fox 64 – Thrills Before the Spills
No Seconds Wasted
There’s not a wasted second. Star Fox 64 isn’t just some museum piece; it’s a two-hour joyride that reminds you why the series ever mattered, and why it actually deserves another shot.
Right off the bat, you notice how boldly the game moves. No side quests. No overblown cutscenes. You’re tossed straight from dogfight to spectacle, then some cheesy banter, then into a boss room before you’ve even had time to settle in. It clicks along with this brisk, almost musical rhythm. Every planet — bang, bang, bang — brings something new, and you’re never stuck slogging through filler.
Honestly, the game’s leanness feels like a breath of fresh air, especially these days when everything wants to be fifty hours long.
Branching Paths
And those branching paths? Still genius. Nintendo nailed this way of rewarding you for mastering the basics without forcing you to grind for evermore. Replay a stage, fly a bit better, and suddenly you’re on a totally different track, facing a new boss or an entire world you never saw coming. Seriously, that sense of discovery doesn’t get old. It’s the sort of thing you want to have fresh in your mind before you see it redone with flashy graphics.
Standing the Test of Time
But really, the best reason to play the original Star Fox 64? It holds up. Not just “it’s good for its time,” but genuinely fun right now. Controls are sharp. Dodging lasers in the Arwing still feels great, and the dialogue — yeah, it’s goofy — but you’ll catch yourself grinning anyway when Peppy yells, “Do a barrel roll!” It’s got this energy that just sticks with you. It’s classic Nintendo, where the game feels alive and nothing is phoned in.
Now think about the remaster dropping on Switch 2. Nintendo isn’t flooding the system with exclusives this time. They’re pacing things out, and honestly, letting third parties fill in more of the gaps. Switch 2 isn’t the same walled garden as before. It’s suddenly “Nintendo plus nearly everyone else.” That changes things.
So a Star Fox 64 remaster means more now; it anchors what Nintendo does best while all these new games start popping up around it. Yes, going back to Star Fox 64 is comfort food — but with a little jet fuel thrown in.
Featured Image Credit
Image via Nintendo.com