Bomberman II

Bomberman II Background Image
Bomberman II Game Cover
Bomberman II
Bomberman II
Bomberman II
Game Console:
NES
Game Series:
Bomberman
Release Year:
1991
Game Genres:ActionPuzzle

About Bomberman II

Bomberman II is a maze-based action puzzle game developed by Hudson Soft for the Nintendo Entertainment System. Released in 1991, the game builds on the original Bomberman formula but feels faster, more polished, and much more chaotic once later stages begin introducing tighter maps and smarter enemy patterns.

This time, the story follows Bomberman after he is wrongly accused of robbing a bank. Instead of simply escaping underground mazes like the earlier game, Bomberman is now trying to clear his name while fighting through enemy-filled stages across different themed areas. The setup is simple, but it gives the adventure a bit more personality compared to the original NES release.

Visually, Bomberman II looks cleaner and more colorful than the first game. Stages have more variety, enemies are easier to recognize at a glance, and explosions feel more satisfying once players start collecting upgrades. The game still keeps the same top-down maze structure, but the pacing feels smoother and less repetitive.

One of the biggest reasons players remember Bomberman II is its multiplayer battle mode. Like many classic NES games, it became popular because matches with friends could turn competitive almost instantly. A small mistake, one badly timed bomb, or getting trapped between explosions could end a round in seconds. Even today, the versus mode still feels surprisingly tense and fun.

While the controls remain simple, Bomberman II becomes much harder in later levels once enemies move faster and maps leave less room for escape. It keeps the straightforward arcade-style gameplay of the original while adding more personality and stronger multiplayer replay value.


How To Play

In Bomberman II, players move through maze-like stages while placing bombs to destroy soft blocks and defeat enemies. Every level hides an exit gate somewhere beneath the breakable walls, so clearing paths is just as important as surviving enemy attacks.

Bombs explode in straight lines after a short delay, damaging enemies and the player alike. Careful positioning matters constantly, especially once larger blast ranges start filling narrow corridors with explosions. Many later stages are designed to pressure players into quick decisions instead of slow, careful movement.

Power-ups hidden inside blocks can increase explosion range, movement speed, or the number of bombs that can be placed at once. Some upgrades make clearing stages much easier, but stronger explosions also increase the risk of trapping yourself accidentally.

The game’s enemy variety is more noticeable than in the original Bomberman. Some enemies move randomly, while others chase aggressively or move through obstacles, forcing players to think ahead before placing bombs. Boss fights also appear during the adventure, giving certain stages a different rhythm compared to standard maze clearing.

Multiplayer mode changes the focus completely. Instead of fighting computer enemies, players battle each other inside enclosed arenas while trying to trap opponents between bombs and walls. Since explosions can trigger chain reactions, matches can shift from calm to chaotic almost instantly.

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