Crave partners with Crayola
It’s no secret that we’re glad we can cook, perform surgery, and do all sorts of stuff with the Nintendo DS’ stylus and touch screen, so why not also color with the DS as well? Time to relive those happy memories of kindergarten: playing with (and sometimes tasting) glue, singing funny rhymes, and of course, coloring anything bland we see.
Crave Entertainment partners with Crayola to bring a colorful game to the DS. The game is a colorful adventure to find hidden treasure. There are mini games to play and quests to do in the Crayola game. It boasts of exciting settings all over the globe. The players, armed with only a treasure map, will color their way through challenging obstacles to complete quests and discover the treasure.
Mark Burke, Senior Vice President of product planning and business development for Crave Entertainment, says that they’re honored “to be partnering with a company that has been synonymous with childhood creativity for more than a century to bring a classic piece of American culture to an entirely new medium”.
It’s no secret that we’re glad we can cook, perform surgery, and do all sorts of stuff with the Nintendo DS’ stylus and touch screen, so why not also color with the DS as well? Time to relive those happy memories of kindergarten: playing with (and sometimes tasting) glue, singing funny rhymes, and of course, coloring anything bland we see.
Crave Entertainment partners with Crayola to bring a colorful game to the DS. The game is a colorful adventure to find hidden treasure. There are mini games to play and quests to do in the Crayola game. It boasts of exciting settings all over the globe. The players, armed with only a treasure map, will color their way through challenging obstacles to complete quests and discover the treasure.
Mark Burke, Senior Vice President of product planning and business development for Crave Entertainment, says that they’re honored “to be partnering with a company that has been synonymous with childhood creativity for more than a century to bring a classic piece of American culture to an entirely new medium”.