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  • I reviewed the Toy Story 2 game a few months ago, and that game was released on the N64.

  • The game I have today is the next in the series, released on the tail end of the Xbox 360’s

  • lifespan. How many sequels, especially Pixar sequels, can you say that about. It might

  • have done this game some good, however, as it’s…achemlight years better than the

  • last game in the series. This is Toy Story 3 for the Xbox 360.

  • Toy Story 3 is an interesting game that follows a similar style to the game released more

  • than 10 years earlier. The main difference is that you have some different characters

  • and abilities to choose from, but you still pick from a few different levels and get missions

  • from toys inside them to complete. Some of these are actually told as stories to the

  • other toys, with different characters playing the role of villains while guys like Woody

  • or Buzz try to stop them. The freedom you get in choosing what to do still makes it

  • pretty unique among video games based on movies, even though the second game did it 10 years

  • earlier. It just hasn’t caught on with other franchises.

  • Toy Story 3 actually controls really well, not just for a movie game, but for any game

  • at all. Jumping and attacking both feel sensitive but smooth, and camera control is actually

  • not an issue at all. The ability to get a horse in one section also makes the game a

  • lot more fun, but the best additions are the sections that allow you control a few different

  • characters. Throwing Woody up to a desk so he can reach something that the other characters

  • can’t adds something different to a game that couldve gotten a little repetitive.

  • Toy Story 3 is also the perfect difficulty for its target audience. Now, I’m not that

  • audience, so I found the game to be pretty easy, except for a few jumps near the very

  • beginning, but the kids this is meant to appeal to shouldn’t have any problem with it. Missions

  • can also be marked with an arrow on your compass so you don’t get lost, and although theyre

  • all pretty easy as well, theyre quick enough for short attention spans.

  • Oh, and did I mention that you can just pick up other characters and chuck them through

  • windows? It’s extremely entertaining. You can do it to anyone. Oh, you just gave me

  • a new mission? Here’s how I feel about that, get in the water! One mission also told me

  • to get a lost donkey back to his owner by pushing him off a cliff, as he claims that

  • donkeys always land on their legs. Remember kids, if you see a lost donkey, push it off

  • a cliff. Using the same visual style of the movies

  • also helps to make Toy Story 3 a really good looking game on the 360. It doesn’t try

  • to do too much, and the frame-rate in cut-scenes is really smooth. Voice acting is also great,

  • as is the case with most Pixar games. I especially liked Kristen Schaal’s performance.

  • I didn’t know exactly what to expect with Toy Story 3, but I was pleasantly surprised

  • to see that the game not only used some elements from the last game, but improved them to create

  • a great title for kids to play. This is one of the only movie games I’d say is a must

  • play for fans of

  • the film.

I reviewed the Toy Story 2 game a few months ago, and that game was released on the N64.

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