The Switch versions will feature the very welcome addition of save files, art galleries, developer interviews, achievements and even music players that will feature the soundtracks of both games for players to listen to. Nonetheless, it’s great to see the more rare, less widely-known sequel returning from the dead. It definitely lost a lot of the first game’s charm, as well as a big chunk of its witty film references. With an odd development that saw the game start life as a title unintended to be a Zombies Ate My Neighbors sequel, as well as the fact that most of the development was not done by LucasArts, but rather outsourced to a Malaysian studio named Motion Pixel, perhaps it’s not a surprise that it had nowhere near the impact or critical praise that its predecessor had. The sequel – Ghoul Patrol, published by JVC, is less fondly remembered.