I watch it alongside my kids on a regular basis, often enough that I’d think it safe to say I’ve seen every episode at least once. Now it just so happens that I love the cartoon SpongeBob, which appears on the cable channel Nickelodeon. So … yes, indeedy, boys and girls, it is in fact an adventure game … but it’s kid stuff. But as I perused the back of the box, I saw no mention of “zany levels” or “wacky races” but rather words like “gather clues” and “map SpongeBob’s quest.” “Hmm,” I thought to myself, with fond memories of the Rugrats Adventure Game dancing around in my head, and I took a chance and plunked down the $30 to buy it. I picked it up, expecting it to be just another package of minigames with no übergame like so many TV cartoon-to-game adaptations seem to be. I was browsing through my local EB the other day and saw SpongeBob SquarePants Employee of the Month. SpongeBob SquarePants Employee of the Month
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