Tiggers Honey Hunt Fixed
Winnie the Pooh decides to have a party for his friends, but needs more honey and asks Tigger to help him collect some. Other friends from the Hundred Acre Wood, including Owl, Rabbit, Eeyore, Kanga, Piglet and Roo, also help Tigger find the honey they will need. After collecting the honey only for Pooh to eat it all before the party starts, Tigger goes to ask Christopher Robin for help, and he suggests having different kinds of food. The party is a big success thanks to Pooh and Tigger.
Tiggers Honey Hunt
Gameplay in Tigger's Honey Hunt is divided between six 2.5D platformer style levels and three mini games, for a total of nine levels.[3] Each platforming level contains 100 honey pots to collect, and Tigger must find a required number of honey pots to complete a level. Tigger can later learn the ability to bounce higher and briefly hover in mid-air, allowing players to replay levels and reach previously inaccessible areas to find honey pots they missed. Some enemies such as bats, crows, and woozles can be defeated by jumping on them, but others like heffalumps can only be avoided.
There is one friend in each of the platform levels who needs Tigger's help finding a hidden item; helping them will unlock a Time Trial challenge for that level. Hidden in each level are photograph pieces bearing a picture of Roo, Rabbit, or Pooh, with four each for a total of 12. Roo's photograph pieces can be collected from the start, while Rabbit's and Pooh's photograph pieces will not appear until the player has collected all 100 honey pots and completed the Time Trial challenge respectively. Collecting all four of a character's photograph pieces in a level will unlock a piece of artwork in the Photo Album menu.
There are two forms of play in Tigger's Honey Hunt, 2 dimensional platformer style levels, and secondly one of three mini games, which make up 9 levels. In the platform areas Tigger must find a required number of honey pots to exit a level. He can then return after collecting any of the two special bounces he learns along the way, which will help him find the rest of the 100 honey pots that are hidden in each of the platform levels. Some enemies such as bats, crows, and woozles can be defeated by jumping on them, but others like heffalumps can only be avoided.
There is one friend in each of the platform levels which needs Tigger's help finding a hidden item. While most items are not alive, in the 8th level the player must find Roo. Helping them will unlock a Time Trial challenge for that stage. Hidden in each level are 4 pieces of Roo photographs that when collected will unlock artworks in the "Photo Album". Collecting all 100 honey pots will unlock 4 pieces of Rabbit photographs, while completing the Time Trial challenge will unlock 4 pieces of Pooh photographs. Collecting these additional photographs also unlocks artwork in the "Photo Album".
Winnie the Pooh decides to have a party for his friends but needs a little more honey. He asks Tigger, a tiger with spring-like tail, to help him collect the honey they are going to have to have the party. Other friends from the Hundred Acre Wood such as Owl, Rabbit, Kanga, Piglet and Roo, also help Tigger find the honey they will need. After traveling through six areas and completing three minigames, Tigger goes to talk to Christopher Robin about finding more honey and he suggests different kinds of food. The party is a big success thanks to Pooh and Tigger.
The game revolves around Pooh throwing a party but doesn't have enough honey, so it's up to Tigger to collect enough honey pots for the party by traversing the various levels and playing minigames as well.
Winnie the Pooh decides to have a party for his friends but needs more honey. He asks Tigger, a tiger with spring-like tail, to help him collect the honey they will need to have the party. Other friends from the Hundred Acre Wood such as Owl, Rabbit, Kanga, Piglet and Roo, also help Tigger find the honey they'll need.
There are two forms of play in Tigger's Honey Hunt, 2 dimensional platformer style levels, and secondly one of three mini games, which make up 9 levels. In the platform areas Tigger must find a required number of honey pots to exit a level, he can then return after collecting any of the two special bounces he learns along the way, which will help him find the rest of the 100 honey pots that are hidden in each of the platform levels, collecting all of them will unlock 4 photograph pieces that can be collected. There is one friend in each of the platform levels which needs Tigger's help finding a hidden item. Helping them will unlock a Time Trial challenge for that stage. Also hidden in the levels are pieces of photographs that when collected will unlock art work in the "Photo Album", each of the games objectives gives the player a percent of the 100% that is possible when playing the game. Also while most objects are not alive in the 8th level the player must find Roo.
Tigger's Honey Hunt is a platform action game in which the player guides Tigger through nine levels. In six levels the goal is to collect a predetermined minimum amount of honey pots in order to get access to the next level. In the other three levels there are mini-games like Rock-Paper-Scissors, to play against other characters from Winnie the Pooh's world.
Additionally you can find secret areas with even more honey pots, collect pictures which you can later look at in your photo album and meet other characters who talk to you or need your help (e.g. finding Eeyore's lost tail).
There are two forms of play in Tigger's Honey Hunt, 2 dimensional platformer style levels, and secondly one of three mini games, which make up 9 levels. In the platform areas Tigger must find a required number of honey pots to exit a level, he can then return after collecting any of the two special bounces he learns along the way, which will help him find the rest of the 100 honey pots that are hidden in each of the platform levels, collecting all of them will unlock 4 photograph pieces that can be collected. There is one friend in each of the platform levels which needs Tigger's help finding a hidden item. Helping them will unlock a Time Trial challenge for that stage. Also hidden in the levels are pieces of photographs that when collected will unlock art work in the "Photo Album", each of the games objectives gives the player a percent of the 100% that is possible when playing the game. Also while most objects are not alive in the 8th level the player must find Roo.
The game itself is pretty simple and clear, it had to be since it is directed directly to the younger audiences. In this very sweet title you play as Tigger, and your main objective for the whole game is to collect honey to help Winnie the Pooh, who's organizing a party for all of his friends. We all know that Winnie Pooh cannot throw a party without honey, and even though Tigger may not like honey himself, he loves helping his friends.
As Tigger, you'll have to explore around the Hundred Acre Woods and even get some help from his friends to get the beloved honey. There's the normal platformer part of the game and a second part which consists of three different minigame levels. The later ones are actually multiplayer, so you can get some of YOUR friends too.
Jumping, running, crawling and facing different enemies, Tigger's adventure is a pretty colorful and joyful one. Finding the 100 honey pots and collecting the pieces of the photographs may not be as simple as it sounds.
Lately, there have been increasingly strident claims by both British and Americans for ownership of Christopher Robin's original plush toys: Pooh, Kanga, Eeyore, Tigger, and Piglet. Since 1947 they have resided in the United States, most recently in the New York Public Library. "The Brits have their head in a honey jar if they think they are taking Pooh out of New York City!" declared an irate congresswoman. But as Charles Gordon noted in a recent column on the subject in the Ottawa Citizen: "Canadians, notoriously unconcerned about their own history, don't associate Pooh with Canada, perhaps because they never visit White River, perhaps because they watch the news on CNN." (1)
In A.A. Milne's poem "Teddy Bear" (1924) Pooh was celebrated as "Teddy," an attribution with a history dating back to Mississippi in 1902. In November of that year, President Theodore Roosevelt had drawn the line at shooting a wretched bear, cornered by dogs, stunned by a blow to the head from a rifle-butt, then tied up for him to bag during a hunt arranged for his visit there to arbitrate a boundary dispute with Louisiana. That sportsmanlike gesture by the famous outdoorsman-politician was immortalized by Washington Post artist Clifford K. Berryman in his famous front-page cartoon of 16 November 1902: "Drawing the line in Mississippi." The actual denouement of the affair was rather less flattering to the great man. (3) 041b061a72