Interestingly, the game does not have a multiplayer mode (which is rare for a mini-game compilation), so unless you have a lot of time on your hands to replay through tons of mini-games you've already played before, you'll be done with this game the second you unlock the last painting. Much of the mini-games focus on trial and error, and once you figure out the gimmick, going back through them after you've figured them out is fairly boring. The mini-games are all very easy to figure out, and you can unlock all of the different paintings in two or three hours, without much skill. Unfortunately, the game also suffers from being very short. The game ends up feeling like a DS port of a Wii game, which is a bit backwards (and a little ironic when you think about it). It doesn't make much sense and feels awkward. One game that was lifted direct from Wario Ware Smooth Moves involves answering the telephone (no really, it is EXACTLY the same) but instead of picking up a Wii-mote you have to draw a diagonal line on the uDraw tablet. Though this mini-game doesn't work at all, most of the games in SpongeBob Squigglepants at least work, but the trouble is that the controls just aren't that intuitive.
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