Rugrats: Studio Tour

Rugrats: Studio Tour

released on Nov 10, 1999
by THQ

,

n-Space

Rugrats: Studio Tour

released on Nov 10, 1999
by THQ

,

n-Space

Help the Rugrats prove that they're more than a bunch of babies as you track down Tommy's little brother Dil in a Hollywood movie studio. Play as Tommy, Chuckie, Phil, Lil, and Angelica as you search every nook and cranny of the four major sets: "Diapies of Thunder," "Captain Cookies," "Lazy Saddles," and "Outside Space" each with its own expansive levels. Enter the Dressing Room to determine which set you'll start from, then choose the order you want to play the levels. There are 16 scenarios in all, including Pirate Mini-Golf, Buried Treasure, Western Roundup, and Loonie Lander. Once you complete all of the regular stages, you'll enter the Find Dil stages. Collect coins, cookies, chocolate milk, keys, aliens, beach balls, and more as you trek through difficult circumstances to rescue one of your own. Up to four players can get in on the action in Multiplayer mode, as well. Good luck, babies!


Also in series

Rugrats: Castle Capers
Rugrats: Castle Capers
Rugrats in Paris: The Movie
Rugrats in Paris: The Movie
Rugrats: Totally Angelica
Rugrats: Totally Angelica
Rugrats: Scavenger Hunt
Rugrats: Scavenger Hunt
The Rugrats Movie
The Rugrats Movie

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Reviews View More

Studio Tour tries to elevate all the content of the first game. It has different scenarios, more stages, and more minigames. The developers get bolder with the platforming sections, but they don't make the gameplay better. This makes the game more challenging than the first one, which could be a difficult spike for young children (the target audience, of course). It's not a terrible game, but it may be too difficult for small children. However, there is some enjoyment to be had. The pirate stage is quite memorable. Adults probably won't enjoy it, but young children might. Only play it if you have young children in your house.

Hot take but I actually enjoyed this more than Search for Reptar. A lot of fun minigames in spite of the game's overall sense of jank, and plenty of charm to the visual and sound-based elements of it. Great if you're a fan of the show.

A sort of minigame collection based around mechanics from the previous PS1 Rugrats game plus Kart Racing. It's not as fun of a game due to a lack of any centralized mechanic, all the minigames are really uninspired and lesser versions of even minigames found in other PS1 games. The minigolf can be especially bad. They even removed the fun jumping and replaced it with more standardized controls. Lame. I do still like the aesthetic, the variety and the humor. Pronouncing words weirdly or incorrectly is just the best, what can I say.

You aren't a true gamer till you get the second key door open on the first key. I just have a very good gaming chair.

All I can remember of this game is playing it wearing an eyepatch