· Lego Racers (age 8+ £39.99) is a racing game plus. You can expect all
the thrills of a very good racing theme: great model cars, Lego themed tracks
and the now essential 3D graphics where you view the race from all sorts
of angles. The fresh dimension in this high adrenalin game, is that you not only
choose a car and a driver you can actually construct them yourself. Doing well
means learning the vagaries of each track while winning means picking up
power bricks to gain a turbo boost, or drop an oil slick on the track.
Winning earns the good bits from the other players cars including the great
Joan of Carts. Thoroughly good fun in a humorous world of bricks
· Though its one of few girls games, Lego Friends (age 5-12 £24.99)
easily beats all the boys. This creative title mixes song making,
choreography and a story line as you join a band preparing for a big gig at
school. You use a music track sequencer to arrange voice, drum, guitar and other
sounds along a time line. Then with the sounds moved around until it sounds
fine, you use a dance sequencer and drop jazzy twists, turns and head twirls to
suit the tune. All this takes place against a backdrop of chat, rehearsals,
sleep-overs and telephone calls between your cartoon friends on screen. There
are places to write about your adventures, take pictures for a scrapbook and a
place to store your secrets! If you like music and dancin, this has it in a
wonderfully original package.
· Cosmopolitan Fashion Makeover is in an entirely
different vein. Enter your measurements and see virtual you onscreen.
Its not just vanity either theres figure-specific advice on the
fashions that suit and lots about dressing for different occasions. And then
its time to try on clothing ranges actually in the shops. You can also go to
the Internet and rummage for new clothes and in the US edition you can
actually buy them. For added realism, this Fashion title lets you import
your face from Cosmopolitan Virtual Makeover 2 where you can similarly
experiment with hairstyles and makeup. Due out early next year, this latter
title is expected to come bundled with a digital camera, all for an estimated £70.
At any price, this is another original.
· For an enjoyable mix of story, fantasy and science Masters of the
Elements (age 8+ £19.99) is a must see. It is an adventure dealing with time,
gravity, light and electricity with a story that unfolds as you wander through a
castle. Much depends on working out puzzles, experimenting, wiring up things and
even juggling. It is challenging, really canny and my favourite home title with
a science theme. It comes from Tivola, a brand noted for its distinctive hand
drawn, hand coloured graphics to match a childs book. For something closer to
school see Millie Metres Adventures in the Giants Belly (age 8+, £19.99).
Complete with classroom materials, this all-narrated, cartoon tour of the
digestive system and conveyor belts of the intestine is wacky and memorable.
And not forgetting the pre-schoolers,
see these from this years best, prices £20-£25
· Bananas in Pyjamas Its Party Time (Dorling Kindersley, age 2-6).
Fun and games with the two crazy banana shaped characters from Channel 4 TV and
featuring unusually crisp and credible animation.
· Thomas and Friends Festival adventure (Hasbro, age 3-5) Tour the
island of Sodor with Thomas the tank engine. You can sponge him over in the
engine shed, oil his wheels, and help him prepare for a festival day. Neat,
interactive play with a band you can control, printing out and colouring.
· Noddy Lets Get Ready For School (BBC, age 3-6) is the best from
the BBC in a long while, truly great large animated graphics with activities on
numbers, sequencing and more, set at different levels for more mileage.
· Microsoft Football 2000 so lifelike its lifelike. Not only can you
change teams, you can change players bodies, the stadium and even the weather.
Great action on the pitch with atmospheric stereo sound and cleverly,
interactive match commentary.
www.tivola.co.uk
www.lego.com
www.hasbro.com
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