![]() ![]() I don’t know the right terminology, but the show is just your standard, run-of-the-mill medium-grade 2D cartoon animation, two or three steps below the efforts of Disney or Don Bluth but about 20 steps above, for instance, a Pokemon episode. However, the game’s animation is markedly different than the show’s. The game is pretty true to the TV show in terms of humor and presentation, even down to employing the same TV voice actors for the game’s main characters. I watch it alongside my kids on a regular basis, often enough that I’d think it safe to say I’ve seen every episode at least once. Now it just so happens that I love the cartoon SpongeBob, which appears on the cable channel Nickelodeon. So … yes, indeedy, boys and girls, it is in fact an adventure game … but it’s kid stuff. But as I perused the back of the box, I saw no mention of “zany levels” or “wacky races” but rather words like “gather clues” and “map SpongeBob’s quest.” “Hmm,” I thought to myself, with fond memories of the Rugrats Adventure Game dancing around in my head, and I took a chance and plunked down the $30 to buy it. I picked it up, expecting it to be just another package of minigames with no übergame like so many TV cartoon-to-game adaptations seem to be. I was browsing through my local EB the other day and saw SpongeBob SquarePants Employee of the Month. SpongeBob SquarePants Employee of the Month ![]()
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