The DS version has a different Solo Mode which is a board game against you (Rayman) and the Rabbid racing for the Television and for the player to get rid of all the Rabbids in the TV. Also during some minigames, adverts will show up which are like little microgames which consist on flicking the Wii remote to throw a mint in a Rabbid's mouth or shaking the Wii remote to roll pizza dough, who ever wins the advert first gets a boost, easier difficulty, more points, or screen wipes depending on the minigame. If you need practicing on some of the minigames, you could go try out the training mode which you could also play with friends. There is a Party Mode which involves 2-8 players to play random minigames and whoever wins a minigame gets to choose, and after beating a select few minigames, there's little microgames like one similar to Frogger and one which to point at the weather icon, if the person beats it, gets to choose the next minigame. If you manage to beat all of the minigames on Sunday, you will be able to play the bonus game: Megaclicker, which is a big collection of adverts that end quicker. In order to beat the game, you will go into Solo Mode and have to beat up to 7 minigames in each day of the week, which drives Rayman crazy each day and forces him to make cracks on his TV. The Rabbids - The main antagonists (playable)Ĭhef Bunny - Appears in a commercial as a protagonist (playable) Rayman - The main protagonist (non-playable, playable in the DS version) The DS version's story is a bit different is that instead of the Rabbids taking over Rayman's TV, its instead TV around the world and Rayman finds his way into the TV world and try to catch all 5 Rabbids. The Rabbids continue to chase Rayman, except for one of them, who stays in Rayman's house and gets a vacuum cleaner stuck to his ears and is too idiotic to tell which a phone and which is an ice cream. In the end, Rayman is trying to watch a football game, but the rabbids keep changing the channels, which causes Rayman to throw his shoe at the TV, breaking it, releasing the Rabbids. Rayman is being annoyed by the Rabbids' TV antics and keeps making small cracks on the TV. As the player progresses through the game, cutscenes are shown to narrate the game's story. The player must play several minigames which parody popular movies and TV shows such as Star Wars, Godzilla, Prison Break, etc. Rayman is forced to watch the rabbids' programming. Rayman seeks refuge on a farmhouse but the Rabbids are struck by lightning and are sucked into Rayman's TV set, turned into Cartoon Rabbids, they decide to invade each channel. It is followed by Rabbids Go Home.Rayman is running away from eight Rabbids (possibly because they found out he wasn't a Rabbid in Rayman Raving Rabbids 2). This is the last Rabbids game to feature Rayman. The game allows up to eight players in turn based mode. Clearing a microgame awards a bonus to the winning player. The "ads" are present in the form of microgames which appear randomly during gameplay, lasting only a few seconds. All the minigames follow the TV theme, being based on films, fitness programs, gardening programs and all sorts of shows. Each day of this week contains a different set of minigames, and some of them make use of the Wii Balance Board. In this third installment of the Rabbids series, the Rabbids take control of Rayman's TV station and monopolize their transmissions during a whole week. The trailer, showing a Rabbid swallowing a Wii Balance Board, indicating the gameplay would make use of the device and as such would be a Nintendo exclusive, just as the previous title of the series, Rayman Raving Rabbids 2.
A teaser trailer was released on April 29, 2008. Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party (known as: Rayman Raving Rabbids 3 during development and it is known as: Rabbids Party TV Party in Japan) is a video game developed by Ubisoft and is the third installment in the Rayman Raving Rabbids series.