
Help Woody, Buzz Lightyear, and friends tidy up Andy's room and beat all the levels in the shortest possible time before Andy gets home. Toy Story Drop! has essential tools to spend some time putting together matching pieces in the company of your favorite characters from the animated saga. Plus on each board are various tools such as rockets that make it easier to delete rows and columns of stones. Although it might seem like a kids' game, this game should appeal to players of all ages as things get ever more complicated as you move through the levels. You need to put together a minimum of three to make them disappear and it's essential to pay attention to the challenges you're given to fulfill them and add up lots of points.Īnother of the things that makes Toy Story Drop! stand out is that you can invest your rewards in unlocking new settings to play in. Just tap the various items to match them up on each board. The controls in Toy Story Drop! are standard for games like this. Throughout the levels you move through Andy's room and unlock surprises. I need a moment.Toy Story Drop! is a casual game with a gameplay similar to Candy Crush but with the particularity that here you find yourself immersed in the Toy Story universe. As for that last sequence after they do-hold up. fold together your own Woody and keep the toys in Andys room safe from the dreaded garage sale. Through it all, the toys' motivation remains simple and crystal-clear: They must get back home to the boy who, grown up or not, still loves them. Woody has always been confident about his place in the world and that his priority is taking care of his kid, whether thats Andy or Bonnie. PTI - Front - Toy Story Woody Paper Toy Fold Up Friend. Potato Head (voiced by Don Rickles) does the spud's spiritual essence reside? But somehow, the profusion of characters, jokes, and action sequences never feels disorienting or excessive.

And a brilliant long-form gag that raises the ontological question: In what feature of a Mr. A lederhosen-clad hedgehog (hilariously voiced by Timothy Dalton) who fancies himself a gifted thespian.


A monster robot guy who toggles in between two expressions-happy and mean-by pounding his own head. Shot after shot bursts with whimsical weirdos popping out of boxes and scuttling atop shelves: There's a Fisher Price rolling telephone who communicates only by ringing up his interlocutor. The idea-generating table at Pixar must be one lively and raucous place, because if there's a toy-related visual gag conceivable by the human imagination, it's somewhere in this movie.
