Compare Disney Sky is Falling Pack prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Avalanche Software. Published by Disney Interactive Studios. Released on 12/7/2006. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Single Player, Third Person, Adventure.

Two mid-2000s Chicken Little games in one bundle: a third-person 3D platformer-adventure and a genre-hopping action spinoff featuring its superhero alter ego, Ace.

The Disney Sky is Falling Pack bundles two titles from Avalanche Software built around Disney's 2005 Chicken Little film: Disney's Chicken Little and Disney's Chicken Little: Ace in Action. Both are single-player, third-person action-adventure games aimed squarely at younger players, and understanding that audience is the only honest way to evaluate them. The first game, Disney's Chicken Little, plays like a mid-tier 3D platformer in the mold of the Tak series Avalanche cut their teeth on before Disney acquired them. You guide Chicken Little and his crew - Fish out of Water, Abby Mallard, and Runt of the Litter - through levels that mix exploration, collectible-hunting, and combat against alien invaders. Gadgets like rocket jet packs, slingshots, and catapults give the action some variety, and the film's voice cast carried over, which at least keeps the presentation from feeling cheap. The platforming is functional but sluggish in places, and the controls can be unresponsive during jump-heavy sections. The structure also leans heavily on fetch-style objectives and minigames, some of which are multiplayer-only on PC, which is an odd call for a solo-focused game. Baseball segments that swap batting for a rhythm-button mini-game are a particular low point. Ace in Action is a more interesting package. Inspired by the "superhero movie within the movie" finale of Chicken Little, it swaps the platformer template for three distinct gameplay modes: Ace on foot as a third-person shooter-style soldier, Runt driving an armored tank, and Abby piloting a spaceship. The tonal shift from film tie-in to pulpy sci-fi action romp gives it a slightly looser energy, and the mode variety at least keeps sessions from going stale. Foxy Loxy and Goosey Loosey serve as the antagonists across multiple solar-system-spanning levels, which is a sillier premise but arguably a more committed one. Both games are products of their era: competent enough not to be written off entirely, but carrying the structural shortcuts common to film tie-ins from that period. PC compatibility is a genuine concern - the port is old enough that community workarounds may be required to get things running smoothly on modern Windows. There is no multiplayer component that works cleanly out of the box, and neither title has received post-launch updates to address compatibility. For a nostalgia play or as something genuinely appropriate for young kids who love the film, the bundle has a defensible case. For anyone else, expectations should be realistic going in. Alex, Scout Team

Disney Sky is Falling Pack
ActionSingle PlayerThird PersonAdventure

Disney Sky is Falling Pack

Dec 7, 2006Avalanche SoftwareDisney Interactive Studios
GamerScout Says

Two mid-2000s Chicken Little games in one bundle: a third-person 3D platformer-adventure and a genre-hopping action spinoff featuring its superhero alter ego, Ace.

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About Disney Sky is Falling Pack

The Disney Sky is Falling Pack bundles two titles from Avalanche Software built around Disney's 2005 Chicken Little film: Disney's Chicken Little and Disney's Chicken Little: Ace in Action. Both are single-player, third-person action-adventure games aimed squarely at younger players, and understanding that audience is the only honest way to evaluate them. The first game, Disney's Chicken Little, plays like a mid-tier 3D platformer in the mold of the Tak series Avalanche cut their teeth on before Disney acquired them. You guide Chicken Little and his crew - Fish out of Water, Abby Mallard, and Runt of the Litter - through levels that mix exploration, collectible-hunting, and combat against alien invaders. Gadgets like rocket jet packs, slingshots, and catapults give the action some variety, and the film's voice cast carried over, which at least keeps the presentation from feeling cheap. The platforming is functional but sluggish in places, and the controls can be unresponsive during jump-heavy sections. The structure also leans heavily on fetch-style objectives and minigames, some of which are multiplayer-only on PC, which is an odd call for a solo-focused game. Baseball segments that swap batting for a rhythm-button mini-game are a particular low point. Ace in Action is a more interesting package. Inspired by the "superhero movie within the movie" finale of Chicken Little, it swaps the platformer template for three distinct gameplay modes: Ace on foot as a third-person shooter-style soldier, Runt driving an armored tank, and Abby piloting a spaceship. The tonal shift from film tie-in to pulpy sci-fi action romp gives it a slightly looser energy, and the mode variety at least keeps sessions from going stale. Foxy Loxy and Goosey Loosey serve as the antagonists across multiple solar-system-spanning levels, which is a sillier premise but arguably a more committed one. Both games are products of their era: competent enough not to be written off entirely, but carrying the structural shortcuts common to film tie-ins from that period. PC compatibility is a genuine concern - the port is old enough that community workarounds may be required to get things running smoothly on modern Windows. There is no multiplayer component that works cleanly out of the box, and neither title has received post-launch updates to address compatibility. For a nostalgia play or as something genuinely appropriate for young kids who love the film, the bundle has a defensible case. For anyone else, expectations should be realistic going in. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamMovie Tie-in3D PlatformerKid-FriendlyAlien InvasionMulti-Mode GameplayGadget CombatCollectathonNostalgiaSingle-Player Only

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
256 MB RAM
Storage
2560 MB
Graphics
Any 3D 32MB DirectX 9 (nVidia GeForce 2 or ATI Radeon 7500)
Processor
Processeur Pentium™ 4 or Athlon XP, 1.4 GHz
System requirements
Microst® Windows XP SP2

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Avalanche Software
Publisher
Disney Interactive Studios
Release Date
Dec 7, 2006

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