

The game's graphics are kept simple, cartoony, and efficient. In general, the mini-games are more fun than the platforming levels, but they're still completely sub-par in terms of fun and playability. Mini-games include driving a fire truck, shooting a vintage cannon at aliens, and sliding down an alien sewer pipe which has gravity on all sides, and several two- and three-dimensional space shooter levels. The majority of Chicken Little's levels are focused on similarly poorly implemented – though in a few cases, pretty fun – mini-game style levels and actual mini-games for the multiplayer mode. However, that style is only the technically most common. Lots of incredibly annoying jumping puzzles. The core of the game is a very plain, bland platformer affair, with you running and jumping around as Chicken Little, and bashing foes with your yo-yo (which inexplicably has pathetic range, yet can reach almost 50 feet to reach a grapple target), trying to work with the laggy and disabling slingshot controls, and solving incredibly annoying jumping puzzles. However, with a little patience, Chicken Little is surprisingly tolerable for adult players, though no one should go out of his way to get this game.
CHICKEN LITTLE GAMECUBE MOVIE
When the first thing you see after the company logo is the namesake character shaking his butt at the camera, you know this is not a game intended for adults, although the fact that it's a Disney movie should have made this obvious.
