![]() ![]() ![]() The moles that live underneath the field struggle to spend a day of putting up with the screaming TV Rabbids. Rayman chucks the TV out the window, and it lands in the field outside. Rayman uses duct tape to wrap around the TV Rabbid's mouth and the volume control, but the Rabbid continues screaming until the TV starts bloating up and the duct tape flies off onto Rayman. On day four, Rayman is lying and the sofa with a cushion over his head, as one of the Rabbids makes a continuous scream while he keeps changing the volume level. Rayman throws the hot water bottle at the TV, making more cracks appear. The night after, Rayman is lying on the sofa with a headache and a hot water bottle on his head, and one of the Rabbids are continuously brightening and dimming the TV. In his anger, Rayman slams the TV, making the corner of the screen start cracking. At first, it works, but the TV switches back on and the Rabbids continue their messing around. As they go on and on, Rayman gets restless enough to where he unplugs the TV. The next day, Rayman is washing the dishes, polishing the windows and vacuuming the house, tired from having had a sleepless night of the Rabbids in the TV annoying him. Rayman takes refuge in a small house at the edge of the forest (presumably his), while the Rabbids are then struck by the lightning, and travel into a TV set indoors, where they scream and mess around, making Rayman try to turn it off, but to no avail. For a few moments, they are distracted by a bolt of lightning, but quickly resume their pursuit. It's fun stuff, just not quite as compelling as it once was.Deep in the forest, Rayman is running away from a small group of Rabbids that had appeared from his broken TV in the previous game. Ditto for the plunger shooting episodes, which place players behind a camera on rails and have them point the remote at the screen to target stray rabbids wandering about movie sets. TV Party's music rhythm games, which involve shaking the remote and nunchuk in accordance with on-screen cues, have been seen before in both previous entries in the series. That said, there are also a few too many rehashes. What's more, TV Party makes use of the Mario Kart Wii steering wheel peripheral as well as the Wii Fit Balance Board (which players can sit on and then lean from side to side to steer a cow down a mountain). ![]() It's been two years, and there are now plenty of games that offer fun, unexpected things to do with these peripherals, but TV Party keeps the Raving Rabbids franchise on the leading edge of innovative motion sensitive interface with minigames that see players using Nintendo's controllers as everything from a motorcycle's handlebars to a flashlight. The first game in the Raving Rabbids series was a hot seller for the Wii because it let players experiment with the unique capabilities of Nintendo's remote and nunchuk controllers. If you do well enough in each game, you'll unlock new costume pieces and accessories, which can be used in TV Party's final mode: World Contest, a challenge that sees players dressing up their rabbids to fit a particular theme (such as \"in the wild\"), then voting on which costumes are the best. Solo mode has players surfing channels from dawn till dusk, selecting the games they want to play as they're broadcast, while Party mode lets up to eight players take turns or go head-to-head in series of seven or more minigames. Predictably, these programs are actually minigames. Now they star in his programs all day long, seven days a week, taking on the roles of athletes in sports programming, pop stars on the music channel, and characters in old horror and sci-fi movies. The game begins with a group of the bug-eyed, bunny-like creatures being struck by a lightning bolt that simultaneously makes contact with the TV antenna of Rayman's house, transporting them inside his television set. Those rascally rabbids are back in RAYMAN RAVING RABBIDS: TV PARTY, a collection of minigames with a boob tube theme. ![]()
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