![]() To do so, all you have to do is hit the '5' key as your own Rabbid skirts from side to side at the bottom, launching the bubbles when targets are in line - and that's literally it. Initially, only one game is available, where the focus (aside from carrot collecting) is on releasing pink bubbles that capture rabbids falling through the sky before they plummet off the bottom of the screen. In each of them, golden carrots are on offer, and it's your job to collect as many as you can, enabling you to unlock all of the games and Rabbids that make the line-up. Mini-games that, rather than being entertaining in their own right, only serve to open up other mini-games. However, even lavish decoration such as this can't hide the fact that Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party is a collection of largely uninspired and derivative mini-games. The anthropomorphic fluffy bunnies certainly don't lack character, and everything from the menu screens to the games themselves (which total twelve) are lifted by their manic presence. No doubt aware of this, the Raving Rabbids - who star here in what is supposedly a spin-off to Ubisoft's ever-popular Rayman series - are actually in danger of overshadowing Rayman, who for so long has been the publisher's de facto mascot. They certainly have their own merit - wouldn't we all have tuned in week after week to see Robin dressed up in spandex without Batman? And why on earth haven't Luigi and Tails ever teamed up to take down Mario and Sonic? The licensing deals they could have picked up would have bulged their bank accounts no end. ![]() You have to wonder why the sidekicks of some of the world's biggest icons never make a break for fame in their own right.
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