For fans who watched the film and thought, "I wish I could build a giant rubber band-powered catapult while fighting an evil platypus," this cartridge is a time capsule of a specific, beautiful era: when licensed handheld games were weird, creative, and unafraid to be different from their console cousins.
The top screen shows the action, while the bottom screen displays Ferb’s blueprint. To build a "Magnet-Boot-inator" or the "Spring-O-Lantern," you must complete a touch-screen minigame: dragging gears into place, tracing circuit boards, or tapping rivets into metal. It feels wonderfully tactile—as if you are actually helping the boys construct their devices. Phineas and Ferb- Across the 2nd Dimension -Nor...
But in the world of Phineas and Ferb, "defeated" rarely means "gone for good." For fans who watched the film and thought,
Released alongside console versions for Wii and PS3, the of Phineas and Ferb: Across the 2nd Dimension stands as a fascinating artifact. While the home console versions chased motion controls, the DS iteration doubled down on what handheld gaming did best: precise 2.5D platforming, touch-screen puzzles, and a massive cast of unlockable characters. It feels wonderfully tactile—as if you are actually
Disney+ has kept the Phineas and Ferb franchise alive for a new generation, and Across the 2nd Dimension remains the high-water mark of the property’s interactive adventures. The DS version respects the player’s intelligence. It doesn’t talk down to children, offering platforming challenges that rival Kirby: Mass Attack or early Rayman titles.
Here is everything you need to know about this ambitious, often overlooked, handheld sequel to the summer of 104 days. Unlike many movie tie-ins that loosely paraphrase the source material, the DS game assumes you have seen the film but doesn't require it. The story begins moments after the movie’s climax. The evil Second Dimension Doofenshmirtz has been defeated, his robotic army deactivated, and the portal between dimensions sealed.