Review

Double Fine Happy Action Theater Review

  • First Released Feb 1, 2012
    released
  • X360

Double Fine Happy Action Theater's imaginative scenarios make for unstructured, lighthearted fun.

They say all the world's a stage. The truth of that statement is debatable, but with Double Fine Happy Action Theater, your living room certainly becomes one. Using the Kinect to transform your surroundings into a number of outlandish settings, Happy Action Theater makes you and your friends the star players in an assortment of interactive scenarios. There's no need for stage fright, though; because there are no goals, nothing you do is ever wrong. It's impossible to fail, and the audience applauds happily at the end of every scene regardless of what you do.

Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.
This video has an invalid file format.
00:00:00
Sorry, but you can't access this content!
Please enter your date of birth to view this video

By clicking 'enter', you agree to GameSpot's
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Now Playing: Double Fine Happy Action Theater Video Review

It's a smart use of the Kinect that avoids the frustrations that are sometimes associated with the device; you don't have to worry about it failing to recognize your inputs at key moments because it never asks for specific gestures. Happy Action Theater uses whatever you give it. It's a toy, not a game, and young kids are sure to enjoy its free-form structure, which encourages imaginative play. It's also ideal for parties with people of any age, as long as they're young at heart. It can track up to six participants at once, and its silly scenarios appeal to the goofball in all of us. But without any concrete goals, there's no sense of progress, so after you've messed around with it for a little while and seen all 18 of its scenarios, you may not feel compelled to come back.

By default, Happy Action Theater automatically advances through its scenarios; every few minutes, the curtains close on one setup and open up on another. It starts off by making it look like your room is filling with balloons, and who can resist the urge to jump around and pop them? Next up is a scene in which your gestures guide fireworks across the screen. There are prop rockets to ignite, and interaction is encouraged; if you high-five another player, for instance, a special firework is set off. Next, a stream of lava convincingly appears to course through your surroundings. Obviously, this isn't a desirable situation in real life, but here, you're free to splash about in the stream, which is liberating and empowering. And it's a joy to see your room converted into such varied environments.

Double Fine is not responsible for any 70's flashbacks you may experience as a result of Happy Action Theater.
Double Fine is not responsible for any 70's flashbacks you may experience as a result of Happy Action Theater.

The visual inventiveness continues as Happy Action Theater turns your room into a sun-dappled grove where you can feed birds, stand still and let them perch on you, or scare them until they gang up to eat you to bits! (Seeing yourself temporarily disappear entirely is Happy Action Theater's niftiest visual trick.) This tranquil scene transitions into one in which you're a Godzilla-sized monster capable of trampling buildings and knocking aircraft out of the sky. There's a kaleidoscope in which your movements shape the psychedelic patterns, as well as a wonderfully amusing disco dance party in which you cut a rug with more hip-shakin' and toe-tappin' flexibility than any human being has ever possessed.

There's also a winter wonderland in which you can toss snowballs and turn yourself into a frozen statue, as well as an aquatic scene where you can swim with the fishes. And, yes, there are a few scenarios that resemble traditional arcade games. In one, which resembles Space Invaders, you move left and right along the bottom of the screen to destroy descending enemies. Another one controls similarly but plays more like Breakout. Despite looking like arcade games, these scenarios are as low pressure as everything else about Happy Action Theater. You can have fun watching your score climb, but there's no way to lose or die.

Eat your heart out, John Travolta!
Eat your heart out, John Travolta!
You can leave Happy Action Theater to its own devices; just set it up at a party and let people hop in to interact with it whenever they want as it cycles through its scenarios. Or you can take control, skipping between activities or sticking with one indefinitely. However you set the stage, Double Fine Happy Action Theater encourages play in the purest sense of the word. Its diverse and imaginative scenarios will delight children, and it's a great fit for social settings as a way of getting people on their feet and interacting with each other in a spirit of warm, uncompetitive fun. That total lack of competition or progress means that there's little reason for individual players to come back to it, but that's also the quality that makes it such a refreshingly different offering. If you have some people to share the stage with, you'll enjoy frolicking in the limelight of Happy Action Theater.

Back To Top

The Good

  • Varied scenarios offer goofy, free-form fun
  • Seeing your surroundings transform is a visual treat

The Bad

  • Lack of goals gives you little reason to come back
9 Comments  RefreshSorted By 
GameSpot has a zero tolerance policy when it comes to toxic conduct in comments. Any abusive, racist, sexist, threatening, bullying, vulgar, and otherwise objectionable behavior will result in moderation and/or account termination. Please keep your discussion civil.

Avatar image for PixelAddict
PixelAddict

2237

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 12

User Lists: 0

Dude! Space Invaders Kinect!!! The other stuff looks like prime babysitting for the little ones, but I'm half interested spending 5 minutes playing Space Invaders Kinect... hmm...

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Savior4Life
Savior4Life

312

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Wow, lame.....

Upvote • 
Avatar image for arf_root
arf_root

31

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

As a parent of three young children (1-5 yrs) I've been waiting for something like this. I've had varied success with Kinect Adventures and Fruit Ninja, but something as simple as navigating menus or Kinect re-calibration interrupt and frustate. These are easily sidestepped by an adult, but can be distracting to children who simply want to goof around. The most enjoyable 'game' ended up being the Kinect chat simply because it was easy, frictionless and my kids got a kick out of seeing themselves on the TV. This is where Happy Action Theater shines. The entire experience is streamlined for the type of play my 3 & 5yr-olds enjoy and is stripped of the things that frustrate and inhibit. No menu navigation, no calibration, no winning or losing. Just turn it on and let them go. The game automatically starts then cycles to a new stage every few minutes. On a techincal level I'm not sure exactly how much of the Kinect's features the game uses, but it doesn't matter - it takes everything my kids throw at it in stride. Nerf sword-play, pillow mountains, even my 1 yr old popping her head into the frame. Never once did the game require even a momentary pause for re-calibration. Lava, fireworks, building crushing commenced without issue. My 3 and 5 years olds absoultely love it and I love watching them pretend the couch is a boat as the room fills with lava. I can't recommend this to adults, but for young kids it's brilliant. Probably the best $10 I've ever spent on kids entertainment.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for carolynmichelle
carolynmichelle

4397

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 62

User Lists: 1

@vetlanda That's wonderful, I'm glad to hear it!

Upvote • 
Avatar image for vetlanda
vetlanda

25

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

My kids, seven and five years old, fell in love with this game. Its the only thing they want to play since I bought it. They make stories about what happens on the screen and can play for hours if I should allow it. So as a childs game its a 10 and absolutely recommended.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Setho10
Setho10

3298

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 43

User Lists: 0

I always love adults who are at touch with their inner child. While not for the audience that visits GS regularly, this game seems like something that young children would simply adore.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for KillerJuan77
KillerJuan77

3823

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

A Double-Fine party game? Color me interested.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for deactivated-5e90a3763ea91
deactivated-5e90a3763ea91

9437

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 13

I do like Double Fine's work, but I'mma have to pass on this one simply because it's another Kinect dancing mini-game collection.

Upvote • 
Avatar image for Gelugon_baat
Gelugon_baat

24247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 656

User Lists: 4

Somebody at Double Fine has a slightly twisted sense of the typical dancing game. :P

Upvote •