

Yard levels provide a healthy dose of action and probably should have been the main focus of the game, since they let you go absolutely assault-happy on an endless parade of cats and dogs. It's also amusing the first couple of times you watch RJ put a newspaper in front of his face as a disguise. Street levels are slightly better, but only because there are humans and cars to watch out for.

Hedge maze levels are especially tedious, since all you're ever doing while making the lengthy trek to the exit is moving boulders and logs out of the way. In the hedge maze, street, and yard levels, you must simply reach the exit. While it may seem like there's a healthy variety of levels and plenty to do, the harsh reality is that most of the levels look the same, involve the same weak goals, and don't offer much in the way of excitement.

Any candy that's collected in the process of retrieving Vincent's food stash can be spent at the porcupine store to buy decorations for the forest or upgrades to RJ's and Verne's abilities. At specific points in the story, Hammy the squirrel, Stella the skunk, and Ozzie the opossum are playable for brief periods. Although RJ and Verne don't look alike, their abilities and attacks are roughly identical. You can pick and choose which levels to play in each chapter and also whether to play as RJ the raccoon or Verne the turtle. Wrapping up each chapter is a collection of house-based levels, which task you with sneaking past patrolling humans, this time to collect food items. They're filled with traps and animals, such as cats and dogs, which you can wale on with RJ's golf club or Verne's shell attack. These levels feel very much like a cross between Frogger and Metal Gear Solid. In street levels, you have to advance down the street and dodge cars, while also staying out of sight of humans. Hedge maze levels are simple mazes, without enemies, where you have to push and pull logs and rocks out of the way to make your way toward the exit. A full chapter consists of one each of the hedge maze, street, and yard levels, along with two or three house levels. The 24 levels in the game are split into four types: hedge maze, street, yard, and house. In yard-based levels, you can brutalize cats and dogs with a golf club. The level layouts are as simple as the story is, so this one is best suited for young children who aren't quite ready to tackle tougher games. You have to push and pull logs, find your way through trap-filled mazes, and sneak past humans, all just to recover a bushel of food that RJ the raccoon swiped from Vincent the grizzly bear. Although there are a few serious fits of action in the Game Boy Advance version of Over the Hedge, it is, by and large, a puzzle game.
