The open world does have quite a bit to do, but what the open world has to
offer gets repetitive.
Not exact matches
The items
offer a great way to
get kids comfortable with math throughout the new school year, as the
repetitive daily exposure increases instant recall of math facts.
Here's what my favorite Parenting Expert, Amy McCready of Positive Parenting Solutions has to
offer on this common question (yea, just
getting really
repetitive now) WHY DO KIDS WHINE?
Good story line and interesting characters make this game well worth playing and the detective type role
offers an unusual game playing experience on the downside the chase felon, drive to point A, chase felon, drive to point B sections
get a little
repetitive but still worth a play through.
Combat can
get repetitive, as with most brawlers, and the platforming
offers the only real challenge in the game, as boss battles are all quite easy.
It might
get repetitive and sometimes the controls do not work as they should, but overall this iteration of Scribblenauts can
offer many hours of great family entertainment with lots of clever mini-games and a decent sandbox mode.
While Red Dead Redemption
gets repetitive at times, it still
offers fun gameplay mixed with a solid story and interesting environment which, overall, leads to a very solid game.
After several maps of this, it does tend to
get a bit
repetitive, but each map
offered just enough to keep things a bit fresh every time.
The soundtrack
offers a nice upbeat tempo and isn't bad, but it is extremely
repetitive, it's the same song over and over, and it
gets old really soon.
They give you that extra push to plough through some of the
repetitive combat scenes you are bound to encounter numerous times, just so you can unlock new party members and once you do the combat
gets a fresh coat of paint again until you have seen everything that character has to
offer, and you want to go out and recruit new ones.
I worry that it will
get repetitive and not
offer enough variety to make it a must finish title.
Havens like the Met, The Morgan Library and The Frick Collection
offer a few works from the Renaissance, Medieval, Ancient and prehistoric eras, but this city has a clear modern bias, which can
get repetitive.