![]() The games can be played by one or two players and make a great way to burn off a little excess summer break energy.Īvailable at most major retailers for $29.99, Get Moving: Family Fitness is rated rated E for Everyone with Comic Mischief by the ESRB. The day it arrived, Megan snatched it out of my hand and ran off to play. Either way, it wasn’t a problem in all the drills, just a few. I’m not sure if that was our Wii remotes (could be time to recharge the batteries) or the basic responsiveness of the game. While most of the movements were pretty intuitive, we did have a little trouble getting the expected response on a couple of drills. While I thought medium was pretty easy on most games (which is good, because everyone in the family can truly enjoy the games), hard was, well, pretty hard, so there is some challenge for older kids and adults. You can customize everything about your Jumpee from hair and eye color to right- or left-handedness and Balance Board preferences.Įach drill or routine has three levels of difficulty: easy, medium, and hard. The first thing you’ll do when you play Get Moving: Family Fitness, is create your Jumpee, which you may recognize from JumpStart’s online game (if not, think: a Mii with arms and legs). Featuring fitness expert and celebrity mom, Brooke Burke, Get Moving will do just that - get the whole family moving as you enjoy activities such as: ![]() Released June 15, this latest JumpStart game is all about getting kids and families active. JumpStart’s latest Wii title, Get Moving: Family Fitness, is completely different from any JumpStart game you’ve seen before. This time was no exception, especially when I learned it was another Wii game - and, even better, a family fitness game! That’s because we love them, so I always jump at the chance to do reviews for them. However, if the game is hacked to re-enable the grade selection screen, all four versions are completely functional, as demonstrated here.If you’ve hung around here for awhile, you know that I’ve reviewed lots of JumpStart products. Thus, only the second grade version is accessible normally, and all of the other grades' content goes completely unused as result. However, by default the player is locked to second grade, and the screen for selecting a grade is disabled. The re-release actually includes all of the content for every grade level, even the expansion files which are no longer downloadble from the JumpStart website. The original release also intended for players to download expansion packs from the internet to unlock all of the game's content, with certain mini-games and countries only becoming available after downloading the necessary components. Each version had different main characters which resulted in differing graphics and dialogue, though the gameplay is virtually the same across all versions. For context, the original JumpStart Around the World had different versions for preschool, kindergarten, first grade, and second grade, which were released as separate discs. There is actually a ton of unused content specific to this re-release. In 2003, the game was re-released as JumpStart Field Trip Adventure. ![]() A voice clip of Brady Bear saying "Your ticket costs four travel tokens." Goes unused since tickets cost three tokens at most.
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