Somewhere in The Fairground of Dread is the laboratory of mad Professor Killjoy. Your task is to find it and stop him releasing his deadly anti-laughing gas. But beware! Wild animals, mechanical monsters, death dodgems and many other dangers await you! Your mission on The Planet of Terror is to find your crashed spaceship, the Homestar, and return to Earth. But first you must outwit deadly Tentaclons, ghastly Mutoids, the evil Brain of Terror and other terrifying dangers! There are lots of different puzzles to solve in each book - mazes, spot-the-difference, hidden objects - and many different routes to choose so you can play these games over and again.
This book is so much fun, it's so entertaining and could teach children a lot about hazards, mazes, clues and solving puzzles. This is a good challenge for children in learning not to give up until you find a solution as there is right and wrong answers in the book. Very cleverly written.
I found this book really good and entertaining. It is a short adventure book where the reader has to choose which path they will take. This is a clever feature as keeps the reader on their toes and entertained.
The book is an adventure to combat as suggested in the title. The illustrations in the book look dull and miserable but I liked the title, so I picked up the book. This is the first book I've read and seen to give choice of which direction you can take, just like a mystery, this is good as children can communicate with each other and decide. This book can be used by year 2 & 3. The reader needs to use expression for the short lived sentences. The seems infusing as you are jumping pages, but the objective is clear 'you need to find the right route'! Good book with well-thought and detailed pictures.
A short and fun choose your own adventure book, this book was a constant companion of my childhood. I never tired of reading it, even though I knew all the paths to take. I loved the evil carousel with live animals, and the poisoned candies. The drawings were vivid and engaging. I would say it definitely inspired my dark imagination. I would love to have it right now! If only funfairs were really that exciting and... evil!