

Again, I loved the game - but as far as I could see, very little was added with the new iteration, apart from a reformatting of visuals for modern TV and a trophy system. I then picked up the sequel, PaRappa the Rapper 2, on my PS4. But at its core, the story was about PaRappa trying to impress a flower-shaped girl called Sunny Funny through the medium of rap.
PARAPPA THE RAPPER 2 ISO HOW TO
As for the story, it was completely off the wall - and you had to play it to believe it, as it included a chicken teaching you how to bake a cake and PaRappa having to desperately use the bathroom. The visuals (90s cardboard cut-out) by Rodney Greenblat were funky and irreverent, and the music was zany. I loved it, and a few weeks later, I picked up a copy on an online auction site. But I finally got the chance to play the whole game at my local museum in April 2014, when a video game exhibition (originally in Melbourne, Australia) came to my hometown in Edinburgh.
-1-thumb.jpeg)

I didn't get a chance to play the original game back in the day, as the title was rarer than hen's teeth! Instead, I made do with the relatively hard Stage 1 on a PlayStation demo disk.
