
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Thursday, April 2, 2009
Backyard Baseball 2010
In terms of graphics and sounds, this 10th edition of Backyard Baseball isn't the bestlooking, but it does deliver an excellent two-player baseball experience. The 2010 edition features new fields and an updated player roster with kid versions of players from all 30 MLB teams. These include David "Big Papi" Ortiz, Ken Griffey Jr., Vladimir Guerrero, and Albert Pujols. A new pitching camera perspective puts the camera behind the batter when hitting and behind the pitcher when pitching. In addition, the Wii version lets you swing the Wii Remote, both to pitch and hit.
Our tester (Daniel - age 9) has played most of the Backyard Baseball games, and this one tops them all. He liked that there are more fields and players in this version, and especially liked playing the Home Run Derby. By playing games in season mode, he was able to unlock Alex Rodriguez, one of his favorite MLB players. At $30 for a Wii game, this is a great value.
Link to buy Backyard Baseball 2010
Labels:
6 yrs and up,
baseball,
coordination,
major league sports,
nintendo ds,
ps2,
wii
Monday, December 15, 2008
Dora the Explorer: Dora Saves the Snow Princess
Looking for a well-designed first game experience for a preschooler? This is an excellent choice.
In Dora the Explorer: Dora Saves the Snow Princess, players join Dora, Boots and Pirate Piggy as they help the Snow Fairy save the Snow Princess and the Magical Snowy Forest while defeating the Mean Witch. The game features 12 minigames that can be unlocked; all are easy to play and master. In the console edition, adults can pick up the second controller to help, or just play along, creating an excellent social opportunity. In the Wii version, players hold the Wii Remote like a pair of handlebars, leaning left or right to move through the side-scrolling levels. Along the way, they climb, dig, build snowmen, paddle a canoe, steer a dogsled and ride a Pegasus using various motions. You can also ice skate, snowboard and ski while trying to find the magic crystal. In the DS version, you can shout into the microphone to make the sea snake go away, blow into it to help the Snow Fairy fly across the moat, tap with the stylus to steer Paj's dogsled, and use the stylus to drag ice blocks to light up the ice cave.
Both the Wii version and the PS2 version are well-designed, although the game play is very different. Testers found the DS version to be more limited in content, resulting in a slightly lower rating (4.5 stars), compared to the Wii and PS2 versions (4.6 stars).
Link to download Dora the Explorer: Dora Saves the Snow Princess
Link to buy Dora the Explorer: Dora Saves the Snow Princess
Labels:
3 yrs and up,
language,
nintendo ds,
ps2,
wii,
windows
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Diner Dash: Flo on the Go

There's been a variety of Diner Dash games in the past (the original idea comes from GameLab). This edition combines casual gaming with a story where Flo is going on a vacation, but loses her suitcase. She has to use her waitress skills to get her vacation and wardrobe back on track. The game features 50 levels and includes blackout and turbulence modes that make waiting tables more difficult, as well as nine types of customers -- including tacky tourists and lovebirds. For $20, you can't go wrong with this fun game, and it definitely stretches your short-term memory. Created by PlayFirst for Bright Minds Media.
Link to download Diner Dash: Flo on the Go
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Eco-Creatures Game

Confusing and hard to learn, this one-player DS game attempts to teach players about the effects that over-industrialization, deforestation, pollution, extinction and global warming have on the environment. While these are big topics, it is hard to figure out what they have to do with this game. Players use the Touch Screen to move a tribe of woodland creatures around an island. Each creature-type has different abilities (Ecolis grow trees, Ecoby build bridges and swim, and Ecomon move objects and fly, and so on). There are 40 missions, but we couldn't get through the first, and our testers all gave up as well. So this really could be a good game, but we'd never know. Other features include a two-tofour player game-sharing mode, and a make your own island feature. Developed by Lightweight Co. Ltd., and Headlock Corporation for Majesco.
Link to buy Eco-Creatures
Labels:
5 yrs and up,
deforestation,
environment,
nintendo ds,
pollution
Sunday, December 9, 2007
SpongeBob's Atlantis SquarePantis Game Review
Full of slapstick Spongebob humor, this scavenger hunt adventure game lets you explore the lost city of Atlantis in search of new outfits and accessories. As you explore, you switch between SpongeBob, Patrick, Sandy, Squidward, Mr. Krabs, and Plankton to take advantage of each character's unique abilities. Each level features unlockable objectives including: Invading Atlantis in the mighty Super-Scooper Tank; getting cultured by creating high art with Squidward; and singing on the magic bus to Atlantis. Additional content includes unlockable bonus features including multiplayer mini-games in the Amoeba Arcade, and customization of SpongeBob with outfits and accessories. Features and prices vary by platform, from $20 for the GBA to $50 for the Wii.
Link to buy SpongeBob's Atlantis SquarePantis
Labels:
8 yrs and up,
games,
nintendo ds,
spongebob,
wii
Wednesday, December 5, 2007
XO Laptop
"Strange, hard to open, but full of surprises" -- was my [WB's] initial reaction to the famous XO $100 Laptop from MIT that actually costs about $430 for two. So I guess it is really a $215 laptop. I had a chance to test a beta version briefly during last month's (Nov 07) Dust or Magic Institute. Important to note up front: the XO computer will not be available in the US or Canada; the only way to get one is through the buy-one, send-one to a poor child initiative.
The small, green clamshell case houses a 433 MHz processor, 256 MB of RAM and wireless Internet, that we could not get to work. There's also a 7.5 inch color screen, a non-standard rubbery membrane keyboard that is almost toy-like, but can be easily imprinted with different languages (currently available in Thai, Arabic, Spanish, Portuguese, English, West African, Urdu, Mongolian, Cyrillic, Amharic; with others planned). The screen flips around, in Tablet PC fashion, making it into a book reader, minus the touch abilities. There is no hard drive or fan, and there are three USB ports as well as an SD card slot.
After struggling for about five minutes to get the case open, I tried the drawing program, that you access by moving the cursor down to the corner of screen, which causes a listing of the available applications to appear from the sides, somewhat comparable to Mac OSX. There's a strangely large touch pad with multiple parts, one for touch and the other for writing. We found the drawing experience to be refreshingly non-gimmicky although obviously difficult using the touch pad. There's just clean, pixel-by-pixel drawing, with the ability to easily import digital photos from the onboard camera. It is easy to see that this device is powerful and holds a lot of potential for expanding Internet access to remote areas of the world, which might include parts of your own hometown. In addition, the open-source aspect of the operating language is extremely promising, and based on the traffic show at the development wiki (http://dev.laptop.org/) it is clear that programmers around the world are working on the operating system, called "Sugar."
Unfortunately, we weren't able to explore, and that's about all we could get out of this computer before the batteries died. On paper, the specs are interesting -- because each computer has a wireless router, this makes it possible for each computer to create its own mesh network, right out of the box. So a child can send notes or sketches to another child in the same room; and if one of the computers is online, everyone can get online. Clearly there's some powerful thinking behind this computer, although we were not able to get any of these features working to personally test. Keep in mind that there's no disk drive, and you won't be able to install Windows or Mac-based software on this computer. Instead, this computer uses the Internet as it's hard drive; not a bad idea.
Entry date: 11/29/2007
Labels:
5 yrs and up,
laptop,
toys
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