Besides a Fluffy Belt of the Diligent Bunny or a Bunny Costume of Master Hare there is also a Two-Ear-Bunny-Mask and more available. Heroes are needed!Holiday itemsDuring the Easter days, 18 special items will be available for the heroes in the Second Hand Shop. Also, on the official Hero Zero Facebook page Easter will be celebrated – and the heroes have the chance to win real prizes.Heroic time and fight missionsHullabaloo, in the small town Humphreydale, goes, the quick help of heroes is needed: A few rascals want to arrange their version of an Easter fire: They burn paper, waste, cardboard, phone books, chairs, armchairs and sofas – and they will not be easy to stop.Īlso, a nasty egg thief roams the city and steals the lovingly painted Easter eggs from their hidden nests from the children, which he also tries to scare with camouflaged pop frogs. In addition, a cute sidekick named Tweeny looks forward to celebrating Easter with the players. Not only can heroes look forward to an exciting collecting event and heroic missions, but also 18 temporary items, that are available in the Second Hand Shop. For these and many other reasons, this series is a rare treat.The Free2Play browser hit shines with a double week, a Facebook contest and much more!Munich, April 11th 2017: Easter season is finally here in Hero Zero! From now on, players of the free2play browser game Hero Zero of the publisher European Games Group and the developer team of Playata can look forward to extremely amusing Easter days in the game. If Wren, Everett, Reynold, and Lucy are to be heroes, they have to learn how first. Though the show's first episode has a conflict-battle-resolution setup that's pretty common to animated shows, the second slows down to take stock of the characters in the battle. Mysterious old doings in a mysterious old town is a great plot hook, but Costume Quest distinguishes itself further by taking the time to flesh out its animated characters instead of rushing headlong through the plot. When Wren warns Everett that the monsters can pass as anybody, even his mom, he scoffs, "My mom made blueberry pancakes this morning, and warmed the syrup! Would a monster do that?" One of the most endearing things about Costume Quest is how much the team of four friends appreciate each other ("If we're getting eaten, we're getting eaten together!" says Lucy cheerily, heading into what might be a trap), as well as existing in a realistic web of family and friends. The world of Costume Quest is one that's nonsexist, nonracist, (relatively) nonviolent, and shot through with positive messages about friendship and respect and teamwork. Viewers who like this series may want to buy and play the video game.Įndlessly charming and delightfully sweet, this magical animated series based on a video game is the kind of show parents want young kids to watch - and they won't have to push it. Adults are present, though often not very helpful, dismissing the children and what they have to say. When the Costume Quest friends fight them, they shoot them with lasers, punch them, send them flying into the air, and so on, but monsters don't die they're merely reduced to small powerless figures who run away (and try again to get the friends' magical costumes). Some of the visuals may be too much for young or sensitive viewers: swirling autumn leaves, spooky old houses, monsters creeping through trees drooling purple drool, their human faces torn off to reveal the giant lizard face underneath. Heartwarming friendships are at the center of the action, and the friend group is ethnically diverse and gender balanced. Strong positive messages are frequent, with characters treating each other with kindness and dignity, and working hard to become the sort of people capable of heroic acts. Parents need to know that Costume Quest is an animated series based on the video game series of the same name that follows a group of four friends who gain super powers just as they discover their small town is overrun with hidden monsters.
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