
Excerpt: "Along the way you meet up with Maxwell’s brothers; complete their objectives and you will have access to their outfit; I figured it appropriate to wear the Edwin outfit. The basic mechanics are still there, you type out words to create objects that will assist you in solving puzzles. You can go as simple as the obvious solution or something way out there. An early objective is to save a girl’s cat from a tree and the obvious answer here would be to create a ladder but why not give yourself a jetpack to fly to the cat? But there’s more now thanks to the addition of adjectives from Super Scribblenauts. Instead of a jetpack I’ll just type “Floating Maxwell” and viola now I can just float to the cat.
The best thing about playing on the Wii U is the fact that everyone in the room gets to see what’s going on. The whole family can brainstorm different solutions while the player writes them on the GamePad. That’s exactly how my girlfriend gave me the solution with the radioactive waste. I was playing on the GamePad and since it plays the same thing on the tv, she saw what I was doing and commented on it. Just imagine the hilarity of playing this game with your family and friends, especially since up to three other players can grab a Wii Remote and control any of the created objects to either help or annoy you."

Jared writes: "Mario in Metal Gear? The best Mario cameos aren't always in the games you'd expect. Check out the top guest appearances the portly plumber has to his name."

Scribblenauts has long been a series lauded for its wealth of adjectives and nouns. Sometimes, it's astounding to discover exactly how far this can go, and that's why we have gone to the trouble of scouring for the most obscure and curious words that somehow yield results.

Having recently found out about Scribblenauts, the fate of 5th Cell is hard to witness.
the problem of scribblenauts is that it just couldn't work on Playstation/Xbox... Nintendo, PC and Mobile was not enough to support the franchise