Two bad games that offer no challenge makes the younger audience insulted with these weak mini-games

User Rating: 1 | Bob the Builder: Can We Fix It? / Tweenies: Game Time PS

It makes you wonder who in the right mind would develop these kinds of games especially on the PlayStation during early 2000's but both games were bundled in 2003 for the PlayStation which were both pre-school games on Bob the Builder: Can We Fix It? and Tweenies: Game Time which were both published by BBC Multimedia.

With them being both educational games for the system helping the younger audience learn and a basic game to play. Too be honest both games are just insulting to sit through and offer no challenge at all to the player, let's start of with Bob the Builder which offers a selection of simple puzzle/challenges like race on a track with either Scoop or Dizzy, Scaring crows away with Spud or doing a simple puzzle-jigsaw by making a tunnel for the hedgehogs to get across; then there's the most basic games like decorating a birthday cake or finding their cat, all of them are just awful to look at but all of them feel like something being used from the internet from using their CBeebies websites but were just lazy to copy and paste them onto the PlayStation disc. Looking at the CGI visuals look terrible when you compare this with other family-friendly games like Spyro the Dragon or Crash Bandicoot or even Rayman which look more impressive than this.

The other game is Tweenies: Game Time where everything about this title is more worse than Bob the Builder when comparing the two together. The graphics and visuals look horrendous to look at when looking at the designs for the Tweenies for a game released in 2001 around the same time when the sixth-generation started to have a bigger library of games on different consoles. You can select which Tweenie you want to play as and choose which challenge you want to do but all of them are either collecting certain items, solve a simple puzzle by memorising certain buttons you see on the screen or a simple race. As I've already mentioned about both games they don't offer a challenge either at the hardest difficulty setting at the age of 5 yet it still feels insulting to the younger audience when playing games on their first console.

At the price, you are paying it's not even worth the time at all and hasn't aged at all but most video games either developed or published by the BBC Multimedia are always often bad titles with poor reviews on release. Even hearing the voicing and audio used in these games are just awful to hear and listen to when loading up either games on the PlayStation.