When the first Drawn to Life released, they noticed the conceptual similarities between it and the Spongebob Squarepants episode "Frankendoodle. Due to the fact 5th Cell was busy with other projects at the time, developer Altron was contracted to develop this new spin-off.
THQ apparently wanted each level to give players something new to do. It was released in September in America, Europe, and Australia. Two months later, it was released in Japan. Following the success of the prior two entries, and the growth of 5th Cell in the time since, a mainline sequel entered development for the Nintendo DS. Being far more ambitious than the previous title, it sought to top the original in every way.
Released in October , it was received positively by fans. Due to a content complaint from the ESRB, the game received a revision which controversially altered the game's ending. This revised ending was later confirmed to be non-canon. There are some cut-scenes that tell the story of 'Bob and his friends working through a bad time in Bikini Bottom, but the majority of the action unfolds at street level with non-stop platforming.
The characters and items you draw mesh nicely into the background thanks to an art style in the game that doesn't look overproduced or polished.
The story begins when Patrick finds a set of pencils dropped from far above Bikini Bottom. He, not surprisingly, seizes the opportunity to make a monumental mistake by sketching a DoodleBob, which proceeds to grab the remaining pencil and wreak havoc. It's up to you to take the pencil away from Patrick and exterminate the threat to Bikini Bottom and its denizens. As you proceed into the first level, you'll feel right at home with butt-bouncing, smashing crates, collecting power-ups, and even a little "mine cart" action The difference comes when you see blank spaces really outlines of items in various parts of the level.
An easel will be situated nearby, and you'll be asked to draw something useful. The drawing part is required to progress in the level, but you can be fairly creative about what you draw.
You figure out along the way that some drawing styles work better than others. It is even possible to redraw enemies, as they will transform rather than just disappear as you defeat them. The first thing you'll draw is the main character, and you'll have several models for reference. It would have been an improvement to have this "reference model" concept continued through the game, so players with less artistic ability could trace from an existing figure.
The magic pencil concept continues into the game's levels, as you attempt to reverse graffiti damage left by DoodleBob. Here's Gary's review. No, not SpongeBob's pet snail - Kidzworld's Gary! With karate chops , jump attacks, power-ups and some help from the DS stylus, you challenge DoodleBob and his scribbled bad guys! As you play you clean up town - rubbing out DoodleBob's scribbled messes, bonking his bad guy creations, jumping all over, and challenging huge bosses until you make Bikini Bottom safe again.
Being able to add your own creations to the action makes this game a ton of fun! From The Cutting Room Floor. The SpongeBob SquarePants series. The Drawn to Life series. Navigation menu Personal tools English Create account Log in.
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