Review: Rugrats Adventure Game

Rugrats Adventure Game

Developer: Broderbund

Publisher: Broderbund
Release Date: November 1997
Suggested Age Groups:
6-10

By
Randy Sluganski

Grim
Fandango
–been there, done that. Trespasser–you’ve seen one dinosaur,
you’ve seen them all. Barney and the Teletubbies–yeech! It’s time to move over,
Mister Rogers, ’cause the Rugrats are in the ‘hood! Why would a grown man go ga-ga
over a children’s game? Hey, a reviewer’s got to do what a reviewer’s got to do!

Tommy,
Chuckie, Phil and Lil, Angelica and all the rest of the family members are here
in a hybrid 3D CD with their original voices, music and animators from the television
show. The evil Queen Angeleeka has kidnaped Tommy’s Reptar toy and now you must
save him from Hubert the Trash Monster. In typical Rugrat fashion, one misadventure
leads to another and a task that would be simple for an adult becomes a major
undertaking for the babies. Oh yeah, I almost forgot, you have to save the earth
too.

There
are three different episodes that you must complete before you can save Reptar
and then the earth. Each episode can be initiated by clicking on a different baby.
Multiple skill levels make the game accessible to all age groups. Any child (or
adult) that beats this game on the easy (Not so tuff) level would then have just
as much fun replaying the adventure on the hard (Most Tufferest) level. This is
truly an adventure game for children and for big kids to play with their children.
No heavy-handed moralizing here; just a plot that is a excellent example of zany
misadventures arising from a simple situation (similar to the classic I Love
Lucy
episodes). Get out your blue crayons and scribble an A for this plot.

There
are a lot of puzzles in Rugrats. It is great to see an adventure game for children
that has inventory- and situation-based puzzles. Can’t get to that door handle?
Try hiding in the garbage can so that your Daddy unwittingly carries you outside.
You have to think like a baby in this game! There were times when my two sons,
Jacob (age 8) and Jonathan (age 11), were frustrated, not with the game’s puzzles,
but with me for taking over the computer. You will need to collect such diverse
items as burnt cookies, a monster suit and Grandpa’s teeth, to name a few, and
in the tradition of all good adventure games, the puzzles become more complex
and satisfying to complete as the game progresses. By the way, be forewarned that
the inventory pieces are stored in Tommy’s diaper. I do have to admit that checking
for the inventory in Tommy’s diaper and peering down my cleavage in Trespasser
have to be two of the most disconcerting adventure experiences I have ever
had in all my years of gaming. There are some minor “arcade” sequences
such as fishing in the garbage for Reptar with Grandpa’s false teeth, but these
games are more fun than annoying. The puzzles in Rugrats are perfect for the intended
age group for this game and get a grade of A.

If
you have ever seen the Rugrats on television (and who hasn’t?), then you
have seen this game. Everything is exactly the same. The player sees the colorful
animation from the height and the viewpoint of the babies. This is an episode
of the television show made interactive and is as much fun to watch as it is to
play. Navigation is made easy by simply clicking your mouse on the various cursor
shapes. The successful completion of various puzzles triggers short movies that
advance the plot. You are made to feel as if you have actually entered the world
of the Rugrats. This is one game where the pictures on the box can boast of truth
in advertising. Every scene is crystal-clear, be it Tommy mischievously peering
at you from between his legs or Angelica’s wicked grin as she goads the babies.
The wonderful animations receive an A.

The music and the sound effects
are, like everything else in the game, directly from the television show. They
are excellent as are all the familiar voices. If you were to walk by a room where
you were unaware Rugrats was being played, you would honestly think that you were
hearing the television show. The only thing I did miss was the familiar Rugrats
theme song at the beginning of the game. This major oversight brings the grade
for the music, sound effects and voices down to a B.

I cannot think
of a better present to give a child to encourage computer skills and future adventure
game playing than the Rugrats Adventure Game. It perfectly captures the
essence and humor of the animated series. If, after clicking on Spike’s water
bowl in the kitchen and watching what Phil (or is it Lil?) does, you are not thoroughly
enchanted with this game, then you are an old curmudgeon who needs to spend some
time locked in the house watching a Rugrats marathon on Nickelodeon.

Final
Grade: A

System Requirements:

PC:
Win9x
4X CD-ROM drive
Pentium 120 MHz
or faster
16 MB RAM
55 MB free hard drive space
Super VGA (640×480
256-color)
Windows-compliant sound device
Video and sound card compatible
with DirectX

Mac:
PMac
120 MHz or
faster
16 MB RAM
50 MB free hard drive space
Super VGA (640×480 256-color)

4X or better CD-ROM drive
System 7.5 or higher

Randy Sluganski

Randy Sluganski

Randy Sluganski was a true adventure gamer and his passion for these games made him just as important as the developers and publishers of these games. Randy passed away after battling lung cancer for over 10 years. Randy can never be replaced but we would like to light a torch in his memory for what he did for us with his love of adventure gaming. We dedicate this site to the Memory of Randy Sluganski and his love for adventure games.