![]() The beauty of the game is in its simplicity eventually you’ll make a mistake and then it’s game over. It’s an endless Frogger clone, where you’ll swipe on the screen to send your little character bouncing over logs in the water, and past cars and trains on the roads. ![]() Otherwise, the game plays in exactly the same way as classical Crossy Road. ![]() So, where Mickey and Donald bounce around a colourful but classical Crossy Road experience, accompanied by some very traditional Disney tunes, change your character over to Simba and you’ll be taken to Africa, and the cars are replaced by elephants and giraffes. With each character, the environment changes to suit. There’s the classics (Mickey, Donald), there’s the modern (Zootopia’s characters), and then there’s the modern classics too (Lion King, Toy Story). Now, instead of blocky chickens, rabbits and zombies, we have a huge number of beloved Disney characters in blocky form. On a basic level it’s a simple reskin of the Crossy Road aesthetic. Today, that game landed on our iPhones, and instantly we were in love all over again. So we were justifiably excited when the team announced that it was producing a Disney version of Crossy Road. Related reading: The Aussies behind this game also produced the excellent Pac-Man 256. It became our Apple TV game of the year last year when we discovered that it is also a lot of fun in multiplayer. It’s fun, it’s light hearted, it’s challenging, and it’s adorable.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |