
In the real Avatar world, Katara NEVER puts out fires in a random Water Tribe village. The plot points make sense, but they are not consistent with the second season at all. So many details are changed that this game is not the second season at all, but rather an interpretation of the second season by either a monkey or a really bad fanfic writer.

This game is supposed to follow the timeline of the second season, but rather seems loosely based on it. You have to reset the game, losing all progress you may have made in the process. There is no strategy involved), or how much I swore, there is no getting a character away from an object once he or she is stuck. No matter what I did, how many buttons I mashed (button mashing is how you fight boss battles, by the way. There is one chest in the swamp area that would stick a character whenever it was opened. And either of those characters can get completely stuck in some part of the landscape. Sometimes the pairings make no sense at all. Two characters are in a the scenes at a specific time, and the game itself determines which two. Unlike the first game, you cannot choose which characters you are playing. You jump from platform to platform along the levels, and eventually, when you've jumped to the correct platform, your mission is fulfilled. There really are no quests, just objectives, and the game is completely linear. But even for a hardcore fan, this game was not worth the money. It's fun if you're really into Avatar, like I am.

In the first Avatar game, Your party of four characters roams through rather large areas completing quests and finding loot. Secondly, this game is nothing like the first. After what seems like a normal level, you are treated to a text box that tells you, "Congratulations! You have completed the game." Upon seeing this message only two hours into play time, I screamed and threw the controller. The game takes only two hours to fully complete.

If you were one of those people, then do NOT buy this one. Many of us were not pleased by the low quality of the first Avatar video game, in terms of such things as graphics, and the fact that it made little sense in terms of the official plot lines.
