Interact with the piñatas: Getting to know and understand the personalities and requirements of your piñatas is essential if you want them to stay happy and thrive
Interact with the characters: Decide how much help you want from the local guides, shopkeepers, and work force. Go it alone or get them involvedyou choose
Watch them grow: Discover the secrets of more than 60 different candy-filled piñata animals to see them grow, change, fight, and even dance!
Anything can happen: Guide a constantly evolving, vibrant world to keep your piñata happy and protect them from dangers threatening to break them open
Maintain harmony: Maintaining harmony within a growing community isnt always easy when rivalries, illness, injuries and even candy-spilling fights occur
詳細描述
Viva Piñata is a window to another world where wild-roaming, living piñata animals inhabit a growing, changing garden world. Take control of this environment and the piñata within it, influencing its contents to create your very own pet paradise.
Once you have resident piñatas, begin to personalize your loyal community. Piñatas can be individually named and given their own personally designed tag to put on display as a declaration of their home turf. The customization doesnt end there. Make the colorful critters more distinctive by customizing them with all kinds of costumes and accessories.
Nice Change of Pace A nice laid back game with lots of content to explore. Not so much as a sequel, though, as an improved re-issue of the first game. Probably too challenging for the target audience of the TV show, but a good choice for older gamers who aren't put off by its sugary veneer.
shimauta101(7) on 03, Dec. 2009 18:39 (HKT)
Similar to the original Not a whole lot of updates from the original. Quite addicting game though!
nazerim(5) on 01, Nov. 2009 21:24 (HKT)
Having Fun? You betcha!
Remember how you got sucked in with the Viva Pinata demo, and then you completely lost track of time playing the original game?
Well you better stock up on Red Bull because I can guarantee you wont be sleeping the night you start on Trouble In Paradise!
alice(3) on 01, Nov. 2009 01:12 (HKT)
Viva Pinata 1.5 The minor upgraded version of a work in front.
But the person who played a previous work is worth using time again.
It is the title which the person without having played should play.
ag2(3) on 23, Oct. 2009 16:07 (HKT)
More intresting then Sims Time killer. One minus hard to stop playing this game.
Boring at times If you enjoy tending to the annoying needs of a bunch of annoying anthropomorphic pinatas, this game is for you.
hiddenryu(20) on 21, Oct. 2009 06:01 (HKT)
Double Trouble Builts up on the first game and supersedes it in every aspect. It doesnt add anything praticulary new to the series, but it is as fun as ever.
If you d like the first game, you are going to love this one.
xAuSx IceMaN(6) on 19, Oct. 2009 16:52 (HKT)
Better Than The First!!!! This game is so addictive that you will be playing it for hours on end.
great sequel! this game is a must have for anyone who enjoyed the first one.
klsaville(7) on 29, Sep. 2009 12:09 (HKT)
Solid sequel All the obvious bases are hit: more pinatas, more items, more things to do. Improvements to the base gameplay are even more appreciated. What's most important though is the addition of a new "Just for Fun" mode which allows you to play without the restrictions and dangers of the main game. I know for a lot of people, the contrast between the happy fun world of the pinatas and the brutal dangers they could meet was a driving force behind their interest in the first title. But some people, like me, just want a goofy garden of crazy animals to interact with. The lack of such a feature stopped me from spending too much time in the original, and I am overjoyed to see it here in the sequel.
Macocon(5) on 28, Sep. 2009 18:19 (HKT)
Sucks you in This game has the "only 5 minutes more and I´m off" effect. You can stop playing once you have started. If you like the original, this game essentially has the same but better.
mreking(6) on 26, Sep. 2009 17:49 (HKT)
Highly Addictive! If you loved the first Viva Pinata, then you'll love this even more. With heaps of new pinata and less micro management, Trouble in Paradise will hook you in and not let go. Say goodbye to the family, girlfriend and any loved ones. Trouble in Paradise is your new best friend.
dipnlik(6) on 20, Sep. 2009 21:41 (HKT)
Colorful! If you're sick of all the grey war games out there give this a try! Very addicting indeed!
asturia2004(3) on 07, Sep. 2009 17:57 (HKT)
amazing amazing game.Your social life finish when you start the game...a drug not a game!greattttt
No bed of roses Warning: Do not start this game if you need to go to school or work tomorrow. Once Viva Pinata: Trouble In Paradise sucks you into its addictive garden-building world, you will find it hard to stop playing. For the benefit of those unfamiliar with the original title, Viva Pinata revolves around cultivating cute cuddly creatures in your walled garden, which you attempt to build into a veritable Garden of Eden by planting crops like corn and carrots and setting up homes for all the Pinatas you can lure. Pinatas can be attracted if you know what motivates them: some come in because of your bountiful orchard or because you have created a sandy area where they like to hang out at. This sequel brings more of the same fun gameplay but a villain, Professor Pester, spices things up in Paradise, making for a stronger storyline. There are also new Pinata species you can capture from two new locales - a desert and an Arctic island. A new co-op mode allows parents to hop in with a second controller and potter about the garden when their child needs help - or vice versa. Be warned: This game is no bed of roses. Peel away the cutesy graphics and there's a game about the art of governing hidden inside. You worry about building homes for your citizens (the Pinatas) and new amenities like a pond or footpaths while struggling with the limited land. Social engineering is required too: you need to spur on your citizens' procreation process to increase the birth rate. Even in this world, you have to attract foreign talent continuously while keeping native Pinatas happy. There is also a fair bit of economics worked in as you juggle the trading of Pinatas and farm produce to build up enough capital to buy more upgrading items - from seeds to fences - for your garden. It is entirely possible that ministering to your garden will give those brain cells a good workout, folks. The best thing about the play here is that there is no set formula to follow: you can tweak your garden haphazardly and Pinatas will still wander in. Planning well and learning how to satisfy all Pinata preferences is a must if you intend to capture the more than 100 species available. Fun for all in the family, Viva Pinata: Trouble In Paradise is heaven for fans of the original.