Didj Custom Gaming System
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Is it age appropriate?
About our ratings(Flash is loading. If this text does not disappear you need to install the latest flash version)
Not age appropriate for kids under 4, age appropriate for kids over 6; suggested age 6. -
Is it any good?
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Common Sense says
Leapster grows up into new gaming system.
Why We Rated This
for Ages 6 and Up
The good stuff
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Educational value:
What to watch out for
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Violence & scariness:
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Language:
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Consumerism:
What Parents Need to Know
This review of Didj Custom Gaming System was written by Jinny Gudmundsen
Parents need to know that this is Leapfrog's next educational gaming system, meant for kids that have outgrown the Leapster. It combines gaming with educational content and permits families to customize the content by plugging the system into a computer and then connecting to the Leapfrog Connect website. When playing Didj games, kids earn Bitz, currency to be used on the Leapfrog Connect website to customize their games.
Families Can Talk About
- Families can talk about whether playing a game while learning makes the learning more fun? Unlike the Leapster, this screen is not touch-sensitive, do you miss it? When playing Didj games, you earn Bitz points. Does earning this currency motivate you to play the game more than once? Which items did you choose to purchase with your earned Bitz?
More on Didj Custom Gaming System
What’s the Story?
What's interesting about this Didj system is that you can customize some of its content. The games cover math, spelling, and language arts skills for grades first through fourth, and for each game, you can select what skills you want drilled. For example, if the game is drilling multiplication, you can choose which numbers you want drilled, or if the game is covering spelling, you can choose which words to practice. You can also customize other aspects of the gameplay, depending on the game. You might be able to change the look of the background in the game or the in-screen avatar. Perhaps you can add special powers to your in-game character. Each Didj game is different, and offers its own customization. To use customize, you must connect the Didj to the Internet using a USB port after uploading the system software.
CloseIs It Any Good?
But Leapfrog made some tradeoffs when designing this system. Unlike the Leapster, this system does not have a touch-sensitive screen. Instead, the Didj reverts to a complex button-pushing system, typically found in earlier game systems. The question of how good this new system will be ultimately depends on how good the games are that play on the system. Jet Pack Heroes, the free game that comes with the system, is just average fare. It plays like a slow-moving Mario-type side-scrolling game where the educational content has been placed on top of the gaming experience. You stop the gaming to answer educational questions. Educational content works better when it is baked into the gameplay and doesn't feel like an add-on. But what's worst in Jet Pack Heroes is that the game does not allow you to save your progress as you play through the 15 side-scrolling levels. That's a real turn-off.
ClosePublisher’s Details
ESRB rating: NR

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