- Platform: Windows, Mac
- Media: CD-ROM
- Item Quantity: 1
Product Details
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hours and Hours and Hours of fun!,
By
This review is from: Blue's Clues Preschool (CD-ROM)
My daughter has had this software program for several months now. She is four years old and doesn't watch Blue's Clues that much, although she knows what it is. That's what's so amazing to me about this software, your kids don't have to sit in front of the TV for hours to know how to play it!
It strays from your typical Blue's Clues adventure of finding the 3 clues. The software runs like a virtual preschool (which she can appreciate now that she's attending one). My favorite feature (and hers!) is how you can give your drawings and paintings away to other school "members". Then a few minutes later along comes Joe explaining that you've recieved one too! I've found the "outside" part of the software to be very full of knowledge about animals. Children take part of a scrapbooking adventure and in the process learn many facts about different animals. All games/tasks can be made more difficult with "leveling" so that the software never gets old. This game is WAY better than TV!
37 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Pass, unless you really love shelves.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Blue's Clues Preschool (CD-ROM)
This Blue's Clues game looks like it was rushed through development. With the show's old host Steve gone, they now have to quickly replace Blue's old computer games so that the new host, Joe, is in them. Most of the simplistic activities have a recurring theme: taking and putting things off and on shelves. Here's a list of what to expect:Activity 1: Go to the bakery and pick items off shelves. Activity 2: Go to the library and put books where they're supposed to go, by matching the book with the letter on the shelf. Activity 3: Go to the Toy Store and help customers buy presents by picking from a shelf full of items. Activity 4: Go to the grocery store, and help Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper select groceries by taking food items off of ... you guessed it, shelves. The only activity that is different, is a mediocre music activity, where you match what Purple Kangaroo does. Eh. Sounds pretty exciting, doesn't it! Well, not really. The only reason this game will sell like crazy is because it has Blue in it. If it wasn't for that, no one would pay attention to it. The activities are simplistic and rapidly become boring due to the recurring and unimaginitive "shelf" theme. Worse, the program doesn't really explain anything to your child. It just jumps right in and says "Match the letter on the book, to the letter on the shelf." Your child may likely ask, "What's a letter?" The show is good, but this game isn't. Pass, unless you really love shelves.
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Lots of fun for a 2 1/2 year-old,
By
This review is from: Blue's Clues Preschool (CD-ROM)
I bought this game for my 2 1/2 year-old nephew, even though it's billed for ages 3-5. I didn't realize, however, that he would take to it so quickly. In the week since I've had this game, he's basically played it for an hour every day, and cries when I try to protect his little eyes by turning it off sooner.He can use the mouse to navigate his way quickly and accurately through Blue's neighborhood. There are many different screens to go through, from Miss Marigold's school, out to the streets, and into the five different stores where you perform the activities. He particularly likes to go into the library and place books back onto the book cart, matching the letters -- even if he doesn't yet know what those letters are called. Other activities seem a little pointless to me: after you go into the "present store" and select a gift, a pile of money appears (as much as $10) and then you have to transfer the bills one at a time into a talking cash register. I was afraid this would bore my nephew, but he actually does all of it. Only the music store frustrates him -- there are only three instruments to play with (a bell, a triangle, and a xylophone), and the music is basically tuneless. Wisely, the game also has fun little extras for when your child doesn't want to complete the activities. At times, all my nephew does is click on the mailbox to make it talk, or watch the fountain shoot water into the air, or get the chimney to count to 9. It's a great idea to include games on Miss Marigold's computer that your child can print out and play with, even when the computer's off. I don't think my nephew will outgrow this game too quickly. On the whole, this has become my nephew's favorite computer game (he also has "Elmo's World: Pets, Food & Telephones" and "Muppet Babies Toyland Train"). Although he lacks the patience, at 2 1/2, to complete some of the activities, he loves the colors and sounds and funny noises the game offers, and can keep himself occupied indefinitely (in toddler terms). One thing the programmers probably didn't intend: although the game is hosted and narrated by Joe, my nephew still calls him "Steve". This makes me laugh!
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