Kids friendly games, age around 6?
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The Simpsons, mame
Super Mario world, nes
Frogger, mameThese are staples for my seven year old daughter.
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Mario Kart
Super Mario World
Super Mario All-Stars: Super Mario Bros. 3
Donkey Kong Country (and sequels)All of these have co-op, are well made, don't have blood or gore and aren't that difficult. In the case of Kart, 50cc is pretty relaxed. In the case of World and Bros. 3, in co-op you can do the levels your kid can't get through. In the case of Country, you could play the "two player team" mode - here, both players get assigned one Kong, so you could switch in the levels themselves if a hard bit is coming up.
Astérix And Obélix on the SNES can be played together, though even in co-op the difficulty might be a bit too high.
If you want Disney games, I feel like Aladdin on the SNES isn't too hard, and it has level select codes. Mickey Mania didn't have level select I think but that's not a hard game either.
I managed to get through a lot of SNES games when I was seven or eight, so if your kid already likes classic gaming at six then it shouldn't take too long until they're good enough to tackle those difficult Disney games.
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Thanks, all!
I will test the games with my daughter and report back.But keep 'em coming. This topic is very interesting, I think. The whole retrogaming with kids shows just hos timeless some of the old games are.
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@andershp Hey.
You can try Bubble Bobble on Mame (maybe you did it cause your avatar....) and Gauntlet (the 2 players version) on FBA (Rom's name is gauntlet2pr3.zip => which means Gauntlet 2players Rev3).
If you use PCSX2, you can try Shrek 2 too. It's a coop game really funny for kids.
On PSX, all Crash Bandicoot (Crash Bash, Crash Team Racing....)
Regards -
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@barbudreadmon
*Pauline, not Princess Peach. It's the "Pauline" hack after all.
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@barbudreadmon said in Kids friendly games, age around 6?:
@andershpThere is actually a nice little hack of donkey kong (dkongpe) for little girls known as "pauline hack" on fba where princess peach have to save mario, you can read more about it there
Excellent read, loved that little story. Thanks for the inputs!
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@perfectroll Capturing wild animals, jailing them in small balls, sending them to battle... I think your vision of friendly non-aggresive game is somehow off : pokemon is all about animal bullying.
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Not counting it shows 12 year old kids quitting the house with the approval of their parents, being helped by a creepy old man, battling together with other kids and grown ups with animals, and sleeping anywhere.
Pokemon is then the story of violent-animal-bullying-probably-abused-preteen-hobos. Neat.
:)
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You probably already have played this one as well given the bar top theme, but "Puzzle Bobble" AKA "Bust-A-Move" should be on the list.
My 5 year old has been playing that since he was 4 and he is surprisingly good from someone his age.
I've tried a number of the sesame street games and other kid games and they are just ... so... slow. In truth I find a large number of games are fine for the kids. They do not have to be good at the game to enjoy it. Example: "Q-bert" I'm not even very good at Q-Bert but the kids like to play it. They run Q-bert right of the board again and again... and again...and...again and have a blast doing it. Another example is Mario (single screen OG Mario). My son and his friend spend the whole game making their character's run away and jump at each other until they inevitably die. Never make it past the first level but they like to play it that way and I have no good reason to stop them if they are having fun.
My advice. Don't worry about the game being to hard. The kids will find away to have fun with it or will find other games. You just need to give them the selection. So your part is more to pull out the violent and adult games and make the judgment call on the borderline cases.
One last example. I will play TMNT (a borderline violence game) with my boy but I also make it clear that if he starts pretend fighting at preschool then we have to stop for awhile, so he knows he is not to mimic ninja fighting at school.
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Absolutely, hands down, Rampage World Tour! My 5 year old daughter's favorite game.
Also,- Simpsons arcade
- TMNT arcade
- X-men arcade
- Donky Kong (pauline edition)
Basically any beat em up with characters she's familiar with.
*OpenBOR games!
(there have been a lot of advances on openbor for retropie in the past couple months making it much simpler to get up & running)I should really look to see if there is a disney princess mod, or learn how to change the sprites myself
SNES Lion king
Genesis Toejam & Earl
Sonic (especially yoshi & Amy hack)I use game genie cheats with console games, and she knows how to add coins on arcade =p
Edit: Not bartop games, but she also enjoys some scumm VM games using a keyboard & mouse like Freddi the Fish and living storybooks.
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I think Windjammers (neo geo) qualifies! It's like Pong, but with a frisbee..it's pick up and play but there's more to learn to keep it interesting.
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I'll add 'Kirby's Adventure' for the NES. I remember looking down on it when it first came out, as I and almost everyone else had already moved on to the SNES. However, looking at it now, it's a beautiful game that pushed the NES to the limits of its capabilities and the ability copying mechanic is brilliantly simple, yet always very satisfying to perform. It's just lot of fun for any age that can operate a controller.
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@lurker said in Kids friendly games, age around 6?:
Example: "Q-bert" I'm not even very good at Q-Bert but the kids like to play it. They run Q-bert right of the board again and again... and again...and...again
… and again
:)
On topic: I can recommend Rodland. I played it a lot in my old Amiga days. For a comparison of all available versions, see this video:
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@lurker said in Kids friendly games, age around 6?:
"Q-bert" I'm not even very good at Q-Bert but the kids like to play it.
Here's a 'Q-bert' play tip for you, or anyone else having trouble. Q-bert was originally designed to be played with a 4-directional joystick that was mounted at 45 degree angle. Gottlieb was so worried that players would have difficulty using the control scheme that they intentionally dialed down the difficulty. Initially, players did have some trouble, but after only a few wasted tokens, Q-bert become infamous among arcade regulars as a game that was not only a lot of fun, but also one that could be played almost indefinitely on one life, due to the reduced difficulty.
When 'Q-bert' was first released by Parker Brothers for its various home ports, the control scheme was unwisely, but perhaps necessarily, carried over in all but the Intellivision port. The problem has since been that Q-bert behaves erratically when played like any other game, making the experience very non-intuitive. Parker Brothers knew this at the time and recommended players hold their controllers at a 45 degree angle to compensate. I've tried this myself and have never really been able to get a good handle on it. For whatever reason, probably due to the increased directional range of the controllers, the Intellivision port allowed players to control Q-bert's movement with diagonal input, returning the game to it's intended feel and difficulty level, without having to contort your hands, or do mental gymnastics.
Luckily, MAME has a very versatile system for mapping controls on a game-by-game basis. To allow Q-bert to be controlled with diagonal input, invoke the 'Tab' menu ('Tab' key) and select the menu option to remap controls for 'this game'. From there, you would input the following:
P1 Right: Right Down, Down Right
P1 Left: Left Up, Up Left
P1 Up: Up Right, Right Up
P1 Down: Down Left, Left DownYou'll notice that each assignment has two directional combinations mapped. This is so that no matter if you happen to hit one combination or the other, Q-bert will still move in the expected direction. I hope this helps and if it happens that you end up mastering 'Q-bert' and are looking for a greater challenge, this same control scheme will also work for the much more challenging sequel, 'Q-bert's Qubes', as well as the little known arcade prototype, 'Faster Harder More Challenging Q-bert'.
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@xboxwin said in Kids friendly games, age around 6?:
@andershp Hey.
You can try Bubble Bobble on Mame (maybe you did it cause your avatar....) and Gauntlet (the 2 players version) on FBA (Rom's name is gauntlet2pr3.zip => which means Gauntlet 2players Rev3).
If you use PCSX2, you can try Shrek 2 too. It's a coop game really funny for kids.
On PSX, all Crash Bandicoot (Crash Bash, Crash Team Racing....)
RegardsMake sure you download save games for CTR and especially Crash Bash (so you can play all the minigames!)
Here is a link to my github: https://github.com/madmodder123/retropie_saves/ -
Just about the most perfect post at the right time and I had to sign up. I have just dug out my Amiga and spent last night playing some games when I remembered I'd always wanted to get my son in to retro gaming. As I clearly don't trust a 4yo with an Amiga I thought about emulation and managed to stumble across this site. Just costed a Pi 3 b+ with a 128GB card and a NES case to sit on the tv unit.
Then I couldn't think of which games would be suitable. He is a little young for Miss World Nude 96'
Anyway that post was to say thanks.
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In this post are a few Kids Friendly Games. ;)
https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/18741/best-of-games-for-kids-up-to-12-years-collections-themes/3
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I have a seven year-old son. MAME co-op games are really the best for parent-child bonding. The unlimited quarters make difficulty a nonissue.
He finds MAME's King of the Monsters hilarious. It's a wrestling game with big monsters destroying the city as they battle. You can play 2 humans vs 2 computers so it's got some good co-op action.
He's obsessed with Mega Man but the NES games are too hard and he can't beat a level. So he loves Mega Man: Power Battle on MAME. 2 humans cooperatively take on Robot Masters. It's kind of like a fighting game but the 2-on-1 format is interesting. There's a sequel called Power Fighters.
Marvel vs Capcom on MAME is also popular. It has a lot of his favorite characters including Mega Man and Spider-Man. I can set my difficulty to Hard and go easy on him so he can win half the time.
I also second the suggestions for MAME cartoon character beat 'em ups like TMNT, X-Men, etc.
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A friend recommended Trog to me yesterday. Seems like a kid-friendly game, if you don't mind the mild violence (battering the cavemen*). It supports up to four players simultanously.
*edit: Oh, and you actually eat the cavemen later in the game, 😇 as you can see at 17:50 in the video.
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