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What is the closest Wii game to Little Big Planet?

My friend has a PS3 and we played Little Big Planet on it. It was so fun! 'Sadly' I don't have a PS3, but I do have a Wii. Do any of ya'll know a game similar to Little Big Planet thay you could buy for Wii?

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Just Dance 3 Just Dance 3
Sale Price: $28.95

2010's best-selling dance franchise returns with the highly anticipated third iteration, Just Dance 3. Dance to over 40 of the hottest hits from yesterday and today, spanning a wide range of genres that are sure to please any music fan...

Zumba Fitness Zumba Fitness
Sale Price: $23.49

Zumba Fitness is an exercise game and program for Wii that taps into the Zumba dance-exercise craze that has swept the nation. Surprisingly challenging, and addictively fun, the 30 heart-pounding Zumba routines that make up Zumba Fitness utilize the motion sensing capabilities of the Wii Remote or Wii Remote Plus controller which work along with the exclusive Wii Remote belt, included with the game, to create a fun but result-producing workout...

New Super Mario Bros. Wii New Super Mario Bros. Wii
Sale Price: $37.00

Developers at Nintendo have dreamed of creating a simultaneous multiplayer Super Mario Bros. game for decades. The Wii console finally makes that dream come true for everyone with New Super Mario Bros...

Just Dance Kids Just Dance Kids
Sale Price: $14.95

40 fun sequences Synopsis When it comes to hitting the dance floor, you've got the moves, you just need room to rock. Really let your expression shine as you turn your living room into a dance floor, let the moves flow and rock out to your favorite tunes in the first-ever Just Dance title designed just for kids...

Wii Sports (Nintendo Selects) Wii Sports (Nintendo Selects)
Sale Price: $17.95

Play like a pro! Transform your Wii Remote controller into a baseball bat, tennis racket, bowling ball, golf club, or boxing gloves, and turn yourself into an instant sports superstar! Put yourself right in the game as a Mii character - a personalized and customizable Wii version of you! Don't feel like a pro? Pick up the skills you need in over a dozen training games, or just shoot for the best score!

Michael Jackson The Experience Michael Jackson The Experience
Sale Price: $20.40

Michael Jackson The Experience is a dance and party game for Wii in which players at all levels can groove right along with the King of Pop. Designed as a complete Michael Jackson gameplay experience, the game features 26 unforgettable hits, authentic choreography, lyrics to each song and visual representations of "The Gloved One" made famous in live performances and music videos for each song...

Wii Play [No Remote] Wii Play [No Remote]
Sale Price: $1.00

Wii Play collects nine quick and addictive games that are easy to pick up and play and hard to put away. Thanks to the intuitive controls of the Wii Remote, even the most inexperienced gamers will have no trouble mastering the controls.

Just Dance 2 Just Dance 2
Sale Price: $20.96

The original Just Dance game got the world dancing like never before, and now the #1 best-selling Music/Rhythm game for play on the Nintendo Wii system is back with Just Dance 2. This time around it will be just as easy to keep the party going with an all-star tracklist--more than 45 strong, plus downloadable songs--from different genres, as well as the hottest dance moves of today...

Nickelodeon Fit Nickelodeon Fit
Sale Price: $7.01

Nickelodeon Fit is a children's fitness game for Wii featuring Nickelodeon's favorite characters Dora, Diego, Kai-lan and The Backyardigans in one game. Packed with 30 scientifically developed and designed exercises that target a variety of fitness areas important for healthy physical development in children, Nickelodeon Fit is the perfect way for parents to ensure that their young children remain active as they are entertained by their favorite cartoon characters...

Just Dance Just Dance
Sale Price: $17.00

In Just Dance players learn real dance moves to songs they know and love across a wide genre of music over the past sixty years. Requiring only one Wii Remote per player, up to four people can break it down at a time, as they follow on-screen choreographed moves set to classic dance tracks, covering a wide variety of musical genres and bringing everyone to the dance floor...

PC gaming has become an astonishingly broad term. Are MMOs, for instance, a mere part of PC gaming, or do their players' tendency to stick with one game for years now make them a separate industry of their own? Should the independent developers churning out inspired Flash games and mods' be lumped in with the mega-budget Need for Speeds and Crysises of this world?

Think Beyond the Box

So while, yes, retail sales of most PC games in plastic boxes may not be in the rudest of health right now, PC gaming as a whole is expanding. Visit Kongregate or Newgrounds and you'll leave with a justified impression that there's more people currently making PC games than ever before. Meantime, Google ads on a clutch of gaming sites reveal this unending slew of MMOs you've never heard of. Some are diamonds in the browser-based rough, others are soulless grinds, but they're all out there making money even when the PC games shelves on the street are increasingly shrunken and dust-covered.

To put some hard numbers on that decline, data compilers NPD recently announced that US retail sales of PC games fell 14 % from 2007 to 2008. As a worrying context, total game software retail sales in the US jumped a mighty 26 % from 2007 to 2008 - largely driven by the Nintendo Wii. It's painfully easy to draw the worst conclusions from this: the PC is the Latin of the gaming world.

The immediate response to such doomsaying is that, while NPD have been the go-to guys for game sales figures for years now, their numbers don't include digital distribution. So, no Steam, no Gametap, no Metaboli, no Gamersgate, no Impulse, no EA Store, and no ongoing MMO subscriptions either, for that matter. Any document of the state of PC gaming that doesn't reference the crazy moneypot that is World of Warcraft's 11 million-plus monthly global subscribers is hardly telling the real truth about the old IBM Compatible's health.

While paid game downloads are still a relatively new kid on the block, their impact can't be discounted either: that 14 % figure is all but meaningless as a portrait of PC gaming in 2008/9. Stardock - publisher/developer of recent big sleeper hits such as Sins of a Solar Empire and Galactic Civilizations 2 - is a PC-only outfit that sees the merit of both forms of distribution: 'On day one, digitally distributed games do better;' reveals Stardock's CEO and founder Brad Wardell. 'Then for the next six months, the boxed version dominates. Then after six months, the digital versions start to catch up again'.

Valve's Doug Lombardi is similarly non-partisan: 'Most of the data we've seen from Steam and from others who sell products at retail and online is that retail remains more or less steady and the majority of the growth seen recently, and projected in the years to come, is from digital sales/revenue. So, it's healthy and it's growing. We don't look for retail to go away, but instead see online as a multiplier for sales overall and a vehicle for creating better products and services'. Of course, for as long as retailers are still earning them good money, slump or not, any publisher would be mad to call them extinct just yet. What is clear is the download market isn't some tangential newcomer anymore: it's big business, and a major signpost as to the future of the PC.

A recent poll of gamers' buying habits (Source: RockPaperShotgun) revealed that a whopping 47 % of them were regularly purchasing downloaded games – while admittedly that's a survey of a fairly passionate group of PC gamers rather than the unwashed masses, it still suggests those fearmongering NPD reports are pretty worthless in their current state.

'In just under four years,' says Lombardi, 'Steam has grown from zero to 15 million accounts. And our installed base is still growing rapidly as more core and casual games are added to the offerings.

Good Old Games (gog.com) is a thriving new home to cheap retro PC games. Given its game library is in the millions, it's not going away any time soon.

Sandra Prior Photo
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