Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Issues
  • News
  • Reviews
    • Geeked Out
    • iPad
    • iPhone/iPod Touch
    • Mac
    • Nintendo 3DS
    • Nintendo DS
    • Nintendo Wii
    • PC
    • PSP
    • PS Vita
    • Playstation 3
    • Xbox 360
    • Wii U
  • Previews
    • iPad
    • iPhone/iPod Touch
    • Mac
    • Nintendo 3DS
    • Nintendo DS
    • Nintendo Wii
    • PC
    • PSP
    • PS Vita
    • Playstation 3
    • PlayStation 4
    • Xbox 360
    • Xbox One
    • Wii U
  • Editorials
CVGames.com logo

E3 2010 Super Scribblenauts

Developer: 5th Cell | Publisher: Warner Bros Interactive
Players: 1 Player Game | Genre: Puzzle
Release Date: 10/12/10

Last year, a little game called Scribblenauts arrived on the scene and wowed and amazed players. This year, Super Scribbenauts is on the show floor to give players more objects, new possibilities, and an incredible amount of fun. At the same time, they are keeping the charm and basic formula of the first title.

Scribblenauts is a DS game where players type in a name of an object to help get past a given obstacle. Developers have been hard at work to improve the gameplay and resolve the complaints some players had with the first game. Instead of relying on a few words to help you complete your objective, Super Scribblenauts, players will be forced to dig deep, into the games' massive vocabulary, and use words other than God, Jetpack, car, and airplane to get through the level. The main way they are accomplishing this goal is to give players new objectives to complete. For example, we were shown a vampire. To get past them you had to do multiple things like hit them with fire and then douse them with Holy Water.

So how were they able to do so much against a single vampire? Super Scribblenauts adds in adjectives along with the vast number of nouns in the game. These can also be emotional so you can make things happy and sad. With this addition, you can really make use of those creative powers that were stifled in in the first game.

Want to control our main hero, Maxwell, with the d-pad instead of just the stylus? In the original Scribblenauts, this was not possible. Not anymore with Super Scribblenauts. You can move left and right and even jump with the d-pad now. This will make the game so much easier to control and get rid of one of my biggest complaints against the original.

Players can also look forward to earning currency in the game, ollars, to purchase unlockable items, gain up to 50 different avatars, and more. Scribblenauts is not just more of the same--but an even better experience than the first.


[nggallery id=56]



By Kaleb Rutherford - 06/16/10
ESRB Details: - Cartoon Violence, Comic Mischief - This is a puzzle game in which players navigate a series of traps, puzzles, and enemies to collect stars scattered throughout the colorful levels. By typing in whatever nouns they can imagine, players can conjure up a myriad of different objects or entities into the game world. By adding adjectives, players can also modify these nouns to create different word combinations, triggering innumerable whimsical scenarios such as: a 'flaming snowman' that can set a Christmas tree on fire; a 'homicidal house' that can attack a man; and a 'carnivorous bike' that can eat a corpse. Players can also elect to summon 'cartoony' versions of bats, bombs, guns, and flamethrowers. These types of items can be used to destroy objects or even other summoned items (e.g., a bat can be used to club a skydiver; guns can be fired at smelly zombies; a knife can be given to a murderous computer to attack a merman). These triggered animations are minimally depicted and are usually accompanied by popping, musical sound effects; bright, star-shaped flashes; or small puffs of smoke. If players wish to, they may type in the word vomit, which causes a beige-colored lump to appear on the screen.
Tags:
  • Handheld Previews
  • Trade Shows Previews
  • Nintendo DS
  • Previews

Screenshots for E3 2010 Super Scribblenauts


  • Send by email
Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly versionSend by email

Latest Articles

Xbox One Reveal Event Detailed
05/21/13
It may not be 720, it definitely isn't infinite, it skipped over being 8, and still decided to put a number after its name....
(Editorials)
Defiance Review
05/20/13
To tie in with the release of the new Syfy television show, Defiance, Trion has released a game of the same name that will tie...
(Reviews)
M3: My Morning Musings - EA Controls the Deathstar, More Xbox Rumors, Plants vs Zombies 2 Dated, & More!
05/07/13
Now that Disney has acquired Disney and shut down LucasArts, they wasted little time in licensing out the exclusive rights to...
(News)
M3: My Morning Musings - CoD Goes Ghosts, GameStop Expo, & More!
05/07/13
Activision has officially revealed, after the title was leaked, the next Call of Duty title ahead of E3. Call of Duty: Ghosts is...
(News)
Parents Press Play Episode 0.9
04/30/13
You can download Episode 0.9 of Parents Press Play here. In today's episode we begin with Daniel and Kaleb talking about...
(News)

From The Archives

WarCraft III: Reign of Chaos
By Kaleb Rutherford | 07/05/02

 remember when the original WarCraft was released. Blizzard, a relatively unknown company by the public, attempted to create a Real Time Strategy game that would rival all competitors. They...

Read More

Our Latest Issues

Be sure to check out our latest Issues to read more exciting News, Reviews, Previews, and Editorials!
The MMO F2P Revolution
PlayStation 4 is Coming!
LoL: Best PC Game Ever?
E3 2012
Resolutionary
February 2012
October 2011
QuakeCon 2011
E3 2011

Copyright 2013 © CVGames.com | All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy | RSS Feed

  • Home
  • Issues
  • News
  • Reviews
    • Geeked Out
    • iPad
    • iPhone/iPod Touch
    • Mac
    • Nintendo 3DS
    • Nintendo DS
    • Nintendo Wii
    • PC
    • PSP
    • PS Vita
    • Playstation 3
    • Xbox 360
    • Wii U
  • Previews
    • iPad
    • iPhone/iPod Touch
    • Mac
    • Nintendo 3DS
    • Nintendo DS
    • Nintendo Wii
    • PC
    • PSP
    • PS Vita
    • Playstation 3
    • PlayStation 4
    • Xbox 360
    • Xbox One
    • Wii U
  • Editorials