Active Life: Explorer With Mat Reviews
Wednesday, May 11th, 2011 at
6:32 am
Active Life: Explorer With Mat
- Tons to explore: Play themed tours or take on individual challenges in freeplay mode for plenty of replayability
- Two modes of gameplay: 24 action-packed mini-adventures that will get the whole family moving with jungle, western, underwater, flying and snow themes
- Fun for the Whole Family: Play with up to 4 players with lots of co-operative and competitive challenges
- Mii Support: Import your Nintendo Mii character or create your own character and customize them with unlockable costumes and treasures
- The Active Life Mat: The specially-designed mat is bundled with the game so you can jump straight into the action (game also available standalone)
List Price: $ 19.99 Price: $ 16.99
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Tagged with: Active • Explorer • Life • Wii Games Reviews
Filed under: Wii Games Reviews
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The Active Life Series is Back,
Back in 2008, Namco Bandai released Active Life Outdoor Challenge. The game was a collection of 15 fun activities, and the game came with its own proprietary mat which had a clever layout of four buttons in blue and four buttons in orange, which could be used by one player or by two players standing next to each other. It was a well-designed and highly successful game.
In 2009, they followed it up with the less successful Active Life Extreme Challenge. This was not a great follow-up to the original. The graphics were subpar to the original, and the activities seemed uninspired.
So the question became: after a sophomore slump, would Namco return the series to its former glory with Active Life Explorer, its third installment?
The answer is a resounding YES.
Active Life Explorer is a game which captures the fun and whimsy of the original, while also introducing enough improvements and innovations to breathe fresh new life into the series.
The game has an “Indiana Jones” theme. All of the activities center around an adventurer as he goes around the world looking for treasure. What I like about this game is that the developers didn’t just use this theme as a mere backdrop–they very thoughtfully designed each game so it captured all the drama and excitement of the adventure. Here are just a few examples:
Runaway Train: This is a load of fun. Your mission is to stop a train travelling at breakneck speeds towards a cliff. You start by running as fast as you can on top of the train (running in place on the mat) , ducking (bending down and putting your hands on the mat) as the train goes under obstacles, and jumping to get from car to car. When you get to the front car, you need to move your feet as fast as you can to pull the brake lever and shut the train down. There’s real drama as the frantic music plays in the background and you see the speeding train on the tracks heading towards its doom!
Mummy’s Tomb: This is one of the more clever games that incorporates both running and video game skill. Your mission is to run away from mummies while lugging all your treasure out of the tomb. After running a while you’ll encounter some gates, which you’ll need to close (by alternating your feet) and lock (by pressing the correct button sequence shown on the screen). While all this is going on, the mummies encroach. You then come to a locked gate, which you’ll need to unlock by pressing the correct buttons in a spinning roulette.
Jungle Vine Ruins: Remember that old arcade game “Jungle Hunt” where your character would have to swing from vine to vine, like Tarzan? This is the same idea, except you’re seeing things from the character’s point of view! Run as fast as you can by alternating your feet, jump off a cliff to reach a vine, and then time it so that you jump to the next vine. This one is a blast.
I don’t have the space here to review the other 21 games, but suffice it to say the vast majority of them provide both great fun and great exercise. You’ll experience everything from trying to stay ahead of a collapsing bridge, leading a dog pack in the snow, and avoiding attacks in shark-infested waters.
Here are some of the things I liked most about this game:
1) There are 24 different games on the disc. On the Wii this is ordinarily a warning sign, as many Wii game publishers who do this end up pushing “shovelware” to the public. Not so with Active Life Explorer. What is impressive about this title is that every single one of the games seems well thought-out and well-designed. There is not a dud in the bunch.
2) The controls are all extremely intuitive from game to game. A clear tutorial is provided for you before you start each game, but in most cases you’ll pick up on what you need to do quickly. This is critical for a game that kids will be playing.
3) Overall, I found the accuracy of the controls to be improved over Active Life Outdoor and Extreme Challenges. And get this–you can actually jump on the mat! (This is a pet peeve of mine with the Wii Balance Board).
4) This is a fantastic family game where multiple people can play together. Some of the games have “co-op” mode where two players have to work together to accomplish a goal. In other games, anywhere from 2 to 4 players can compete head-to-head (they each take a different side or corner of the mat).
5) It really is great exercise. After I played through all 24 games I was out of breath. I can only imagine when families and friends play together and the competition gets intense, that families will get exercise without even realizing it.
6) The graphics are beautiful. It’s still a Wii, so the graphics are still cartoony. But the game developers did a great job of design, from the bright red molten metal in Mine Cart Mayhem to the beautiful colors…
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|Great fun,
I got this game for my 5 year old daughter for her birthday, and it’s been a big hit. She and her 8 year old cousin–and the parents!–had a blast playing it, very intuitive controls and you should see their little legs moving! She does get frustrated with not being the best at every game, but a lot of the games are cooperative in play (3 legged race, everyone pedal a car, both move feet at the right time to steer one cart, etc.), and if anyone clears a level both avatars celebrate. Each segment is very short, but it keeps it fast paced and fun, and you run a bit then rest, then run some more. I love the amount of exercise she is getting off it. A couple of the different things have been too hard for her (timing your jumps to avoid fire breathing statues, press buttons on the mat in order or three at a time), but I figure she will grow into that & it will be challenging for older kids and adults. Plus the avatars on the three legged race literally had me rolling on the floor laughing as they stumbled and tried to run and fell. The chasing mummies etc. are very cartoonish, and when they catch you there is just a big cloud of dust till you get free … a little scary, but not overly so.
The other fun thing is the Miis. This time around you get to use your mii, and you earn costumes for it. Yay, fun for a five year old for sure! Very nice. Overall I highly recommend for 5 years and up, this is a visually appealing and very fun game, alone and especially with a friend or two. Lots of great upgrades from the earlier versions, lots of very nicely thought out and fun challenges, and easy to play the quest (unlock different challenges at increasinly difficult levels) or free mode, where you can play or practice any of the different games with 1 to 4 people (we just chose 2 player and switched off, but it worked out very nicely). Lots of fun!
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