Mia's Reading Adventure: The Bugaboo Bugs is a DVD-ROM for the PC or Mac platform that offers an "adventure" filled with puzzles and small challenges as you work your way towards a resolution of a storyline. You can
get the game on Amazon.com for under $25.
As an extended game experience, this title is plagued with the shortcomings so many desktop PC-based kids' games have. The animation is good, but some of the story sequences are very long, and you can't skip or fast-forward them if you've played the game before. The movement tracks pretty poorly (that is to say, non-intuitively) with mouse clicks, which is how you lead Mia around. Sure would have been nice for the movement to support a keyboard equivalent.
On the plus side, the types of challenges the player faces are varied and interesting, the characters have personality, and the entire game can be played at a range of difficulty levels. We really enjoyed the "mini-games" and Z was enjoying the challenge of many of them, and working her way towards mastery of the "easy" level.
Mia's creator, Kutoka Interactive, made a great decision in offering these challenges in a stand-alone format on the same disk and install. This means a kid can jump into any of the individual, small challenges, play it at one of four different difficulty levels, and keep playing it as much as they want. Several of these short games are very good, like the fuse-matching rhyming game from our screenshot above.
Unfortunately, the games often have long, repetitive instructions you can't silence without cutting out all sound, and you can't act anyway when the instructions are being provided. Just as with the overall game, the Kutoka developers were thinking largely in "movie" mode when they designed these smaller experiences. This ignores the fact that a child might wish to play one of these games dozens or even hundreds of times to master a skill and increase the challenge level. Requiring them to go through the same song and dance each time they want to start what may be a pretty brief game is like making you listen to a three-minute presentation every time you want to start your car. The whole premise of games like this is that kids are smarter than that. Why not treat them that way?
Kutoka has also made Mia Adventures math, science, and language (French or Spanish).
- Jeremiah