Winnie the Pooh's Rumbly Tumbly Adventure

Winnie the Pooh's Rumbly Tumbly Adventure is an action-adventure video game of the action-adventure genre released in 2005 intended towards younger audiences. It was published by Ubisoft and Disney Interactive and developed by French company Phoenix Studio. The game is based on the Disney version of the Winnie the Pooh character. A Mobile game titled Pooh's Hunny Trouble, was released on 2009 for Disney Mobile Studios.

Gameplay
The game has three different modes: Birthday Adventures, Junior Mode and Multiplayer Games. Birthday Adventures is basically Story Mode. While Christopher Robin and Winnie the Pooh take an adventure in the woods, Pooh starts to feel hungry. Christopher Robin tells Pooh to recall happy memories. Pooh thinks that this is a good idea and he therefore does so. Junior Mode is for even younger children and there's no objectives to do, and Multiplayer Games allows you to play some minigames.

Plot
Winnie the Pooh and Christopher Robin take a walk in the Hundred Acre Wood. Along the way, Pooh complains that he is hungry. Christopher Robin tells Pooh to think of something else. Pooh has no idea as to what to think about, so Christopher Robin tells him to remember his favourite times. Pooh decides to read the birthday scrapbooks of some of his friends, and finally his own which takes him through flashbacks of his birthday adventures where he looks for Piglet and finds him a broom, searches for Tigger, search for two missing Tigger costumes, looks for a new home for Eeyore, and going on a treasure hunt. After reading them all and completing the adventures, Christopher Robin shows up and gives him a picnic with all of his friends.

Voice actors and their characters

 * Jim Cummings - Winnie the Pooh/Tigger
 * John Fiedler - Piglet
 * Ken Sansom - Rabbit
 * Gregg Berger - Eeyore
 * Jimmy Bennett - Roo
 * Tress MacNeille - Kanga
 * Andre Stojka - Owl
 * Michael Gough - Gopher
 * Tom Wheatley - Christopher Robin
 * David Ogden Stiers - Mr. Narrator

Reception
The GameCube and PlayStation 2 versions received "mixed" reviews, while the Game Boy Advance version received "generally unfavorable reviews", according to video game review aggregator Metacritic.