Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (2023)

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (1)

One of the best Kinect games ever, Disneyland Adventures, is now back on Xbox One and Windows 10 with Xbox Play Anywhere support. Players of all ages will love the chance to explore an authentic virtual Disneyland using either a controller or Kinect.

Welcome to Disneyland

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Disneyland Adventures is a simulation of the California Disneyland theme park. The park is gigantic and filled to the brim with the sights and sounds you would experience in the actual theme park. People like me who've never been to the real park will love the chance to explore it from the comfort of home.

Walking around a virtual theme park would get old quickly without stuff to do. Thankfully Disneyland Adventures has three main ways to keep busy: interacting with Disney characters, hunting down collectibles, and of course, the rides.

Meet your favorite Disney characters

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (3)

One of the joys of visiting a real theme park is posing for photographs with people dressed as popular characters. Disneyland Adventures takes that concept to a whole new level as you're not just meeting suited characters, but the characters themselves.

From classic toons like Mickey and Donald to newer creations such as Buzz Lightyear and Stitch, you'll encounter practically every Disney character worth caring about in this game. They look (and usually sound) just like the real things. Using the d-pad you can hug, high five, dance, and ask for autographs, as well as taking pictures with every character. Kids will really love the sense of affection the Disney characters exhibit towards them with these interactions.

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (4)

The toons often give you fetch quests and other tasks to complete, such as finding Donald's lost hat or food for Stitch. Fetch quests aren't normally very engaging, but the authentic characters and delightful and endearing atmosphere here make these tasks a pleasure. Similarly, the game is overflowing with collectibles – not unlike collectathon platformers Banjo Kazooie and Yooka-Laylee. Hunting everything down will take hours and hours, exposing you to the park's many nooks and crannies.

Minigames and rides

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Of course, a theme park simulator would be nothing without rides to go on. Disneyland Adventures does not disappoint, with multiple rides presented as full multi-stage minigames. These include rides based on Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Toy Story, Finding Nemo, and more. You'll also find minigames based on real-life rides like The Haunted Mansion, It's a Small World, and Splash Mountain.

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(Video) Disneyland Adventures - Review - Visit Disneyland from Home!

Most of these minigames have transitioned smoothly from Kinect controls to physical ones. Some involve pressing a sequence of face buttons in quick succession though (as pictured above), which is much harder than it should be. The timing and presentation on those bits could use some tweaking.

Exploring the park with a friend

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (7)

Disneyland Adventures would be a fine single-player game, but two-player local co-op makes it even better. The entire game supports drop-in, drop-out play. As you explore the park, the main player controls movement while the second player tags along on autopilot.

Once you start talking to a Disney character, the toon greets each player and then you both have a chance to interact with him or her. I love this aspect of the game because a parent can handle the relatively complex park navigation but their young child still has a chance to hug Mickey and the gang.

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (8)

The real fun of co-op is taking on the attractions together. Pretty much every ride is made easier with a partner since they can collect coins and attack enemies alongside you. All of the attractions can be instantly selected from the Fast pass menu - a great feature when you and your partner want to enjoy the attractions without running around the park.

Kinect support

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Disneyland Adventures supports both physical controllers and Kinect. While the minigames play great with Kinect, park navigation is ill-suited to motion controls. Putting out your left or right arm turns you in that direction, while moving your arms forward (as if you were running or power walking) makes your character walk.

Those movement controls are far too clunky and imprecise. Navigating the park and hunting for thousands of collectibles becomes a chore when you have to flap your arms the whole time. Unlocking the minigames through normal controller play and then accessing them with Kinect through the Fast Pass menu is an option, though.

Xbox One and Xbox One X enhanced

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (10)

The original Xbox 360 game was developed by Frontier Developments (of Planet Coaster and Jurassic World Evolution fame). The Xbox One and Windows ports, however, come from Asobo Studio, makers of the enjoyable Rush: A Disney-Pixar Adventure, which has also just jumped to Xbox One and Windows.

Playing on Xbox One, the game sports mild graphical enhancements, including new lighting and colors. Some of the textures appear to be enhanced as well, though there are still low-resolution textures here and there. The frame rate hovers at around 30 frames per second, but it dips more than often than it should. Loading times into and out of minigames are also excessively long, unfortunately.

Disneyland Adventures is enhanced for Xbox One X, with native 4K resolution and HDR. If the frame rate and loading are also improved, the Xbox One X will easily be the best way to visit this virtual Disneyland.

Overall impression

Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (11)

When I spoke to the original developers at E3 a few years ago, I remarked that motion controls were the only holding Disneyland Adventures back. Now the game is back on Xbox One and Windows – and we can finally play it with a controller. With a vast virtual park to explore, loads of beloved characters, and plenty of minigames, Disneyland Adventures is one of the best Disney games out there.

Pros:

  • Explore a vast and largely authentic Disneyland from the comfort of home.
  • Meet and interact with your favorite Disney characters.
  • Two-player co-op makes this a perfect family game.

Cons:

  • Loading times are excessive on Xbox One.
  • The frame rate could be smoother.
  • The in-game map is slow to load and difficult to use for navigation.

Disneyland Adventures costs $29.99 on Xbox One and Windows 10. It's an Xbox Play Anywhere title, so progress and purchases on the downloadable Xbox and Windows 10 versions carry over between those two platforms.

Xbox One review copy provided by the publisher.

(Video) Disneyland Adventures Xbox Series X Gameplay Review [Xbox Game Pass]

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Disneyland Adventures review: Skip the long lines and visit Disneyland on Xbox and Windows (12)

Paul Acevedo

Paul Acevedo is the Games Editor at Windows Central. A lifelong gamer, he has written about videogames for over 15 years and reviewed over 350 games for our site. Follow him on Twitter @PaulRAcevedo. Don’t hate. Appreciate!

21 Comments

  • So does this mean I cant use my 360 disc?

  • For asking that question, you have to go to the back of the line. :P

  • after going to Disney World 4x this year and being in Disney Vacation club getting this for my family.

  • Four times in a year? I went once and am more thna fine not going back for a while...if ever again. I cna't imagine 4 trips to the place in a year.

  • Personally can't stand sports and am just baffled by the hundreds of hours a year people spend watching them and the money to go to live events and sending their children to do them.Aka, to each their own. If I lived close and had an annual pass I could go to WDW every month.

  • Nice review, still think this needed a successor with the other Disney parks as ewll. Controller movement and Kinect minigames is definitely the right mix, as movement was always shoddy at best and turned me off from buying it after trying my brothers' copy on 360. I might get this sometime, given the wasteland of interesting XB1 titles of late.

  • They had the Walt Disney World Explorer years ago right before Animal Kingdom opened for Windows XP. My family and I loved that app. I am surprised that they have not created more like that to promote the parks but then frankly they are doing fine as attendance is pretty high year around.

  • Sweet! After reading this I'm definitely going to pick it up! Thanks!

  • Thinking buy this for my kid

  • Too bad there is no discount for people who already purchased Kinect Disneyland Adventures. I'd like to play it without Kinect on Windows 10, but $30 seems overpriced for basically the same game I already have.

    (Video) Disneyland Adventures Gameplay Walkthrough Part 2 - Xbox One

  • We got this as well when it was for 360 Kinect. It was something my daughter and I could play together at the time as she was 5 and a controller was too much at that age. We loved it and just loved how you could walk around Disneyland and play mini games. As we were playing I had the same thought as you in that I'd like to go back and be able to play a version with a standard controller without Kinect. Now that she's 9 and can play with a controller this might be something we'd have fun revisiting. $30 seems a bit high but it's not surprising with typical Disney markups.

  • Never been to Disneyland, i guess i would enjoy visiting virtually....but it kinda sounds sad.... In a way....

  • This looks very cute and possibly worth a look. The price isn't bad at all for a dozen or so hours of fun.

  • Just started playing this with my 3 year old and he's absolutely besotted with it.As if Disneyland isn't something I already hear about almost daily!Also, it looks really nice on Xbox One X.

  • Yeah, the Kinect aspect of this game was always kind of difficult, mainly in the navigation. The Mini-Games were good though.That said, even with the demise of the Kinect, I am glad they still brought it to the XBOX One.My only wish...they port KINECT PARTY...please???

  • Yeah, it's such a shame Microsoft didn't ask Double Fine to make a new version of Kinect Party for Xbox One. The upgraded camera quality alone would've made it so much better.

  • Since I can not afford to take all my kids on a trip like this... I guess this is mybest option!

  • Nice review, will def pick this up now. I can always tell my wife it's for the kids. :)

  • This looks like quite a nice and enjoyable game! Nice to see it also has One X support. May keep an eye on this one.

  • This game would be great for my brother's kids. The coop just makes it that much better. I remember playing Kingdom Hearts back in the day and the characters brought back such wonderful memories from when I was a kid. I can only hope this game does the same for the kids of today. The co-op is what really stands out to me. I wish more games did this. Plus the Xbox Enhanced support makes it that much better for everyone to enjoy. This wasa great read and I think it has pushed me to consider picking this up for my nieces and nephews. Thanks again for all the info you provide on all the games you review.

  • So does this support Kinect on Windows? Played the 360 version with my kid and they loved it. The kinect made it seem like they were hugging the charterers. Also they loved the dancing part. Would be awesome to do this again on my PC with kinect

(Video) They made Disneyland into a terrible video game

FAQs

Does Disneyland Adventures work on Xbox one? ›

Kinect: Disneyland Adventures is a 2011 open world video game developed by Frontier Developments and published by Microsoft Studios on Kinect for Xbox 360, with a remaster for Xbox One and Microsoft Windows developed by Asobo Studio released in 2017 as simply Disneyland Adventures.

Can you ride rides in Disneyland Adventures Xbox? ›

One of the few areas in which Disneyland Adventures fails to be a perfect recreation of the park is in the rides themselves. There are two or three rides which you can actually go on, but just about every major ride has been completely reimagined as a minigame.

Do you need Kinect to play Disneyland Adventures Xbox one? ›

The XBox One version adds the ability to use a controller instead of Kinect controls to play the game. While using the Kinect controls during attractions can be fun and entertaining, I would strongly recommend using a controller when you are just walking around the park.

Can you play 2 players on Disneyland Adventures? ›

Two players can explore the park together, with the main player controlling navigation. Both players can interact with famous Disney characters and participate in the attraction minigames together.

How long to beat Disneyland Adventures? ›

How long does it take to beat Kinect: Disneyland Adventures? The estimated time to complete all 49 Kinect: Disneyland Adventures achievements is 80-100 hours. This estimate is based on the median completion time from 19 TrueAchievements members that have completed the game.

How many characters are in Disneyland Adventures? ›

Disneyland Adventures allows fans of all ages to explore Disneyland park, enjoy adventures based on 18 popular attractions, engage in 100 challenging quests, and interact with 35 beloved characters.

Videos

1. Disneyland is a Video Game?! - Disneyland Adventures Pt. 1
(Brian Hull)
2. REVIEW: Disneyland Adventures Remaster (Xbox One)
(WDW News Today)
3. Virtual Disneyland!? Let's Play Disneyland Adventures for Xbox One
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4. Xbox Event | Disneyland Adventures & Rush: A Disney-Pixar Adventure | Disneyland Hotel
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5. Princess Parade! - Disneyland Adventures #13
(Brian Hull)
6. "Disneyland Adventures" Xbox One gameplay demonstration at Disneyland Resort
(Inside the Magic)
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