Worms World Party

Worms World Party
PC Cover of Worms World Party
Developer(s)Team17
The Code Monkeys (PS1)
Fluid Studios (GBA)
Paragon 5 (N-Gage)
Publisher(s)Microsoft Windows/Dreamcast
Titus Interactive
PlayStation/Game Boy Advance
Ubi Soft
Windows Mobile
JAMDAT Mobile
N-Gage
Nokia
Producer(s)
  • Lee Clare
  • Paul Kilburn
SeriesWorms
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
Dreamcast
PlayStation
Game Boy Advance
Windows Mobile
N-Gage (both 1st[2] & 2nd generation[3])
Release
6 April 2001
  • Windows
    • EU: 6 April 2001
    • NA: 16 June 2001
    Dreamcast
    • EU: 27 April 2001
    • NA: 4 June 2001[1]
    PlayStation
    14 December 2001
    Game Boy Advance
    • EU: 4 October 2002
    • NA: 29 October 2002
    Windows Mobile
    3 October 2003
    N-Gage
    • EU: 15 April 2005
    • NA: 11 May 2005
Genre(s)Artillery, Strategy
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Worms World Party is a 2001 artillery turn-based tactics video game developed by Team17, and is the sequel to Worms Armageddon in the Worms series. As with the previous games in the series, players take turns controlling their teams and using available projectiles, firearms, explosives, and equipment to destroy all opposing teams and manoeuvre across a specified and highly destructible map.

Although fairly well received upon release, the overall reception of Worms World Party has subsequently become mixed amongst the Worms community. Some found it to be an improvement to an already good game, whilst others saw it as being too derivative of its predecessor and not worthwhile for Worms Armageddon players. Worms World Party was the last two-dimensional title in the main series before transitioning to 3D graphics, with Worms 3D as the first fully 3D Worms title.

  1. ^ "Updated Dreamcast release list". GameSpot. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Nokia N-Gage Worms World Party". Nokia. Archived from the original on 15 October 2007. Retrieved 14 February 2007.
  3. ^ "Nokia devices to host Worms World Party". Nokia. 14 February 2008. Archived from the original on 14 March 2017. Retrieved 24 December 2023.