Disney’s Princess Royal Adventure
- Explore seven unique worlds
- Become friends with Disney Princesses made as 2D stylized characters
- Help the Disney Princesses find their missing friends and collect special rewards
- Control the character with increasing skills
Product Description
Disney Princess: Royal Adventure is an action/adventure game starring your favorite Disney princesses. You’re the young caretaker of a Disney castle, and it’s up to you to find a pool of special crowns that have gone missing. Venture to different areas of the castle and fun places in and around the village, increase your skills and earn enough points to explore several different worlds. During this exploration, you’ll become friends with the Disney Princesses — Jasmine, Cinderella, Belle, Ariel, Snow White and Sleeping Beauty — who will help her on her journey.
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very excellent attention of the supplier and the quality of the product is excellent
Rating: 3 / 5
This game is alright if you know how to read. I bought it for my 5 year ancient daughter and she is just learning to read. I do not recommend this game for children that can’t read. If I knew that it required a lot of reading I would not have bought it.
Rating: 1 / 5
My 8 year ancient got this game when she was 7 and she loved it. It kept her buisy for hours! When she beat the game she started over to do it all again.
I agree that there is a lot of reading for 6 or younger, but, the reading is simple for my outcome.
Your outcome can get by without reading. The place they want you to go lights up on the map until you get there. So if you show your outcome how to do that, the game can go on without your help, or with min. help from you!
Rating: 5 / 5
Once again the ESRB ratings show just how worthless they are. The target consultation for this game is likely the three to six year ancient girl. Unfortunately the game involves a tremendous amount of reading, which pretty much rules out most of the target consultation. I sat with my daughter for an hour playing this lame game, reading huge volumes of stilted dialogue for her. While the game requires the ability to read, the manual dexterity required of the player is minimal – dull for anyone who’s spent any time around a GameBoy.
Avoid this game at all costs.
Rating: 2 / 5
At first glance, Disney Princess: Royal Adventure for the Gameboy Advance looks like a new game where you can play as the six most well loved Disney Princesses–Snow White, Cinderella, Aurora, Ariel, Belle and Jasmine. This first depression would be incorrect.
Royal Adventure is set up like a traditional RPG, in which you play Lily, a girl who works at Castle Bright, a castle which, oddly enough, has the ability to talk. All is going well until the six tiaras needed for Castle Bright’s traditional Ceremony of the Crowns have gone missing. The entirety of the game consists of Lily’s epic quest to locate the six tiaras. But, that is much simpler said than done.
Every release character will send Lily all around in circles asking her to go tasks for them, which she always does. The dialogue is completely unnatural. For instance, someone will say he’s sad and Lily will “Aw, no one should be sad. Music always makes people pleased! Let me play a song to cheer you.” After a mini-game, the person will respond “Thank you, Lily! I feel much more pleased now.” Aside from unpleasant dialogue, Lily is basically treated as a servant. No matter how much of a stereotypical “Mary Sue” princess she looks like with her pink gown, she is certainly not treated like one. Every release person she questions for help solving the tiara mystery supplies a favor from her.
Whether it’s walking back to the other side of town to get someone their lunch or going owing to the forest to visit someone’s friend, this game will have Lily running around in constant circles. It takes several hours to play, but the only reason for that is the constant running back and forth. Not a release person gives her a direct answer when she questions if they know about the tiaras. Instead, they will first question for a favor and then go all the way across the world map in the exact contrary management to question someone else who knows about it.
There are several mini-sports meeting interspersed throughout it, including a memory game to find library books with the same cover, a clothes matching game to match hats, shoes and dresses, a gem game in which you need to fit the right gem into the right slot based on the shape, a music game in which you have to press the right note button at the right time, and a puzzle game to place pictures of the Disney Princesses back together. The most fun of these is probably the puzzle one because the artwork is so adorable, akin to the princess artwork featured on the cover.
None of this sounds like it involves the Disney Princesses at all, so where do they come in? Well, in between running around the world to do favors for people, Lily eventually discovers six secret passages, each of which lead to one of the six princesses’ worlds. Once she meets a princess, that princess will tell her that her animal friend has gone missing. Upon finding and returning the animal, the princess will give Lily a special item and two very cute artworks will appear–one of the princess with her animal friend and one of her giving Lily the item. The artwork is probably the best reason to play this game, so if you don’t care about that, then there is no reason to play the game. Fortunately, after meeting a princess, the artwork is availble to watch whenever you want in the “Extras” section of the main menu.
By and large, this game is needlessly lengthy and involves a ton of repetitive tasks. If you like the princess artwork don’t mind several hours of running back and forth for no obvious reason, then you shouldn’t have too much of a conundrum with this game. But, you should be aware before playing it that the main heroine is extremely passive and does no matter what she’s told, not exactly a excellent heroine for girls who prefer to reflect for themselves. The artwork is nice, and if you delight in the mini sports meeting, it has a small replay regard because they are all accessable to play individually from the main menu after playing each one in the game. The game itself, but, does not have much replay regard because it really isn’t worth that much running around just to see a few cute princess pictures.
Rating: 3 / 5