Going into the review, I wasn’t expecting to have as much fun with
Miss Spider’s Harvest Time Hop and Fly as I did. I was expecting to see yet another blow-off title aimed at kids; what I got was a solid, well put together platformer. As far as the game’s story goes, Miss Spider and friends are out in the garden collecting fruit to store up for the winter. The garden serves as a world map where you control Miss Spider, who acts as a mobile HQ for the rest of her insect friends. Levels are denoted as spots on the map that Miss Spider can travel between. At the start of the game, she can only travel to certain sections of the garden, though later sections are unlocked as the gang’s fruit collection grows.
Each level comes in one of four flavors. Two of these level types, a platforming area and a side-scrolling flying area, are standard gameplay types while two others, a sky-surfing area and fruit-collecting side-scroller, make special use of the DS’s unique functions. The only major problem I found with the game as a whole was that the two more unique gameplay types were limited to only a few levels while the more standard ones (the platformer and flying level) are used way too often. Because of this, the game feels a little too repetitive a little too soon; something that may not sit well with kids with short attention spans (in other words, most kids). Although the gameplay is solid, it doesn’t take many chances; later levels are hard only because more “stuff” is on the screen rather than trying to introduce little step-ups in design to keep things fresh.
Once a level is completed in Adventure mode, it is unlocked in “Bug-a-Bonus” mode where you can play through it as many times as you’d like without having to navigate through the garden. As much as I enjoyed the game, I didn’t find myself wanting to return to many levels, though the game’s target audience might think otherwise (provided the gameplay doesn’t wear thin). Completing levels a second time in “Bug-a-Bonus” mode unlocks pictures that can be viewed in the Gallery. Again, I didn’t find myself wanting to get all of the pictures, though Junior Completists might want to.