

Raving Rabbids Travel in Time can be played in a Competitive mode.

What unites the genre is the speed with which players can pickup the games and the relativley short time requried to complete a level or two. Mini games come in a variety of shapes and sizes. Raving Rabbids Travel in Time is a Minigames game. It can be played in Competitive Splitscreen Sharedscreen modes.

Raving Rabbids Travel in Time is a Minigames game available on the Wii. Single-player Styles (Overview) Augmented Reality First Person Meta-games Physical Real-time Single Player Campaign Third Person Turn Based 3D Multi-player Styles (Overview) Assistance Competitive Co-operative Shared-screen Split-screen Game Genres (Overview) Adventuring Fighting Minigames Platforming Rhythm Improving Shooting Racing Sporting Strategy Handheld Reviews DS iPhone/iPad PSP GBA Gameboy/Color Vtech Legoĭownload Games Xbox Live Wii-Ware DSi-Ware PlayStation Network Hobbyist Reviewers Board Games R/C Car Collecting SoundtrackĬonsole Reviews Wii Xbox 360 PS3 PC PS2 Gamecube Hobby Reviewers Scared Returning Bike Fitness Tech Sports Race Touch Thinky Reviewers Considered Story Soulful Dressup Intimate Perpetual Microcosm Ways to Read Game People Blog Podcast Columns Reviews News Guides Articles Blogs Recomended Games Competitionsįamily Reviewers Domestic Eclectic Family Teaching Teen Frugal MultiplayerĪrtistic Reviewers Scripted Novel Mouse Audio Rebecca Mayes Haiku Teletext Magnetic Art Overall, I can only hope that if another Rabbids game is on the way, it won't be like this mess.About Game People About Start Here Contact Like Just Dance it's as vague as you can get even if the right moves are made the score doesn't count, while it counts if you don't copy the move. This is basically a reskin of the Just Dance games, in which it features some rotoscoped dude doing dance moves, and you have to copy him. But here's the worst part - the dancing sections. Reminiscent of one minigame from the very first Rabbids game, you try to control some Rabbids singing by playing what seems like a Guitar Hero knockoff. Other than the minigames there are online features that we hadn't got round to checking out since my boyfriend traded in his copy, as well as a "Choir" section. Like in Rabbids Go Home there is a hub, though walking around in that is quite a bore. The minigames don't have proper explanations on how to play them like the previous games did, but rather tiny windows that pop out of nowhere throughout the actual minigame that are not easy to read. So far I played it on multiplayer and there was some unnecessary tethering somewhat like Knuckles Chaotix, but half the time you're all over the place thanks to dodgy controls. This review contains spoilers, click expand to view.Ī big disappointment in the series.
