PBN Review- Littlest Pet Shop for Wii

Littlest Pet Shop WiiOne of the reasons I most wanted to get a Wii was having a much wider variety of games to choose from for my kids. The Xbox just didn’t have that many games for kids 12 and under, and none at all for preschoolers. Well, the Nintendo Wii is sure picking up on that untapped market by releasing just a ton of games meant for younger players. There are games for Bratz, Build-A-Bear Workshop (review coming soon!), Rubik’s Cube, Hasbro Family Game night, and this one that we reviewed this weekend, Littlest Pet Shop, which we received from Parent Bloggers Network.

You start the game by naming your first three pets, which are a dog, a kitty, and a bunny. Kaitlyn named the dog “Elvis” (our dog’s name), the kitty “Kaitlyn”, and the bunny “Bunny”. That’s what you get when you let a three year old pick the names! You start by controlling the dog, and the game shows how to move the controller to move the dog over to the Pet Store where you buy a pair of sunglasses. Then you are prompted to move over to the Pet Salon and shown how to open the accessories menu. You can choose from about a dozen different pairs of sunglasses, capes or collars, and hats or headbands. It’s fun to dress up the pet :)

The game does a good job of explaining how to switch between controlling the different pets, and you are prompted to take each of them to the Salon for outfits. You also pick up coins along the pathway as well, which earn you more items in the Pet Store. You unlock games for each pet as well, like keeping the pet on top of a moving ball, and one where you blow bubbles to bounce coins in the air.

I tried to show Kaitlyn how to use the remote and play the game, but her hands are just too small and she really doesn’t get how to point it at the screen. I would say that this game is really best for children ages five and up who have learned to use the remote. I must confess, I kept playing even after she ran off to do something else. I changed the pets’ outfits a few times, and I even earned enough coins to unlock a new pet! This part is cute- you have to buy a train ticket, then the pet arrives on the train, and the graphics are really cute for that part. I unlocked a Polar Bear, which Kaitlyn named…Pants. Yes, Pants, because that is her new favorite word that she thinks is the funniest word ever.

This is a wonderful game for Littlest Pet Shop fans or just as a fun game for younger kids (and Moms too). It really brings the Littlest Pet Shop world to life, and the best part is, no tiny little plastic accessories to lose. I’m hoping that once Kaitlyn is a little bigger and can work the Wii remote, she’ll have as much fun playing Littlest Pet Shop as I do!

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Anyone else remember Press Your Luck?

For this weekend’s Blog Blast, Parent Bloggers Network is asking us to reminisce about our favorite game shows. I like game shows, I don’t watch any one of them regularly any more, but when I was a kid, my Grandma Sullivan got me hooked on The Price Is Right. I watched it during college if I had a free period during that time, and when I worked in an office, we could get CBS on the radio so we would listen to it from our desks. I found myself watching it again after Kaitlyn was born. I’m not as big a fan of it with Drew Carey, but I still try to play along with the games.

I also enjoy Jeopardy and  Family Feud, and I like to yell at the screen while watching Deal or no Deal. But the game show I always really had a soft spot for was Press Your Luck. Contestants had a big button in front of them, and they watched a light move around a screen with spaces on it for cash and prizes. The catch was, there were also spaces that brought up the “whammys”, little creatures who “ate” up everything they had won. So the contestants would yell “big bucks, big bucks, no whammys!” while they were waiting to press the button. It was a simple idea but lots of fun to watch.

How would you like a chance  to win an Arm Chair Holiday Shopping Sweep? You can shop like a mad woman on the old game show Supermarket Sweep, but do it from the comfort of home! Just write a post before 11:59 p.m. ET this Sunday including links to Parent Bloggers Network and the sponsor, Oliebollen.com. The winner will get 12 hours to buy any five different in-stock items at Oliebollen! Send your post link to parentbloggers@gmail.com. And start browsing around the Oliebollen site now so that you have your Shopping Sweep all planned out if you win!

The Elf on the Sled

With Christmas just over five weeks away, many of our children will start bringing home handmade Christmas decorations from school. I not only save every decoration my kids make, I hang them proudly on my Christmas tree. Every year, I carefully unpack the paper stars outlined with glue and sprinkled with glitter, the pinecones coated with glue, sprinkled with glitter and tied with a ribbon for hanging, and the snowmen made from pompoms, and give them places of honor right on the tree.  There are no store bought ornaments that mean more to me than those treasures, made with my childrens’ own hands.

Parent Bloggers Network
asked us to post this weekend about our handmade treasures, and although I could have gone down to the basement and unpacked the kids’ decorations, what I decided to show instead is a decoration my husband made in 1979 when he was 11. I don’t remember when he first showed it to me, I assume his mother must have given it to him when he got his first apartment. But ever since it came into our house, it’s had a place of honor. Right now it lives on the bottom shelf of our large curio cabinet in the living room. I present to you, our handmade treasure, the Elf on the Sled:

Chris made this at his Grandma’s house, so he doesn’t know where the elf figure or the sled itself came from. He thinks the sled might have been a kit that he glued together. At one time the elf was also lightly glued to the sled but it’s no longer attached. The best part? He gave the sled a name:

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Yep, “Mean Mother”. His Mother passed away two years ago, but he tells me that she wasn’t mad that he named the sled that. So there you have it, our handmade treasure. This PBN Blog Blast is sponsored by Klutz, the makers of award-winning activity books for people of all ages. With Klutz books, you can learn everything from juggling to face painting, and they are available at most bookstores. Even I could probably learn to do crafts with those books!

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