The setup is simple: Maxwell, the main character you control, wants to get a star (the Starite) in each level and that can't be done just like that. Two kinds of challenges are presented: puzzle and action. In the puzzle version you need to complete a mission, usually helping or fighting people or animals. The Starite is then the reward for succesfully completing the assignment. The hint you get at the beginning helps you on the way. In the action version you first get to see where the Starite is located and then need to find a way to get there. Also here you get a hint to help.
Scribblenauts has long been a series lauded for its wealth of adjectives and nouns. Sometimes, it's astounding to discover exactly how far this can go, and that's why we have gone to the trouble of scouring for the most obscure and curious words that somehow yield results.
Matt from FuzzyPixels presents a list of the top five puzzle games of all time, as well as handing out a couple of special awards.
Having recently found out about Scribblenauts, the fate of 5th Cell is hard to witness.
the problem of scribblenauts is that it just couldn't work on Playstation/Xbox... Nintendo, PC and Mobile was not enough to support the franchise