It's time to fall asleep like a baby with some of the worst PS1 games made for kids. I like to call them PS1 games for babies. Some are bad educational games, some are downright frustrating. Enjoy this asmr relaxing video helping you drift off to sleep while reviewing some of these terrible games what will have you sleeping like a baby.
Whenever @Caddicarus meets his viewers in real life, a shocking amount of them tell him that his videos help them fall asleep. No, I don't understand either. And so, here we are with the brand new Caddy Sleeps channel. Specifically designed and edited in a way to be as sleep-friendly as possible, the lovely @PelvicGaming has taken various segments from Caddicarus videos, cut them down to remove all the chaos, removed any silly sudden noises, kept the skits to a minimum and levelled all the audio to be balanced so you can fall asleep to it all as much as possible. Or you can study to them. Or you can relax to them. Whatever you chose to do, get ready for the ultimate British ASMR about video games. Or you could call them Caddicarus funny moments or Caddicarus out of context, except the context here is that you have to try and use these as background noise while you study or relax to.
Today, Caddy is stuck. After waking up with tiny hands, he can now ONLY play games made for babies and toddlers on the PS1. Preschool video games have a rocky history, and continue to do so even today. Even though just saying that these are video games for preschoolers is enough to make your stomach turn. AVGN has looked at some, even PeanutButterGamer or PBG has, so it’s clearly something people like to see. Baby video games and toddler video games have been around ever since the days of the Atari 2600 and Colecovision, and in my opinion, they have always been nothing but a cash grab or sellout. By design, video game consoles are not meant for very young children. The controllers are the wrong size, the systems are often too delicate for sticky and clumsy hands to operate and they often require a decent level of reading skills and hand eye coordination to get enjoyment from. They were not built in the same way that Fisher Price or Vtech toys were - there were family-friendly games, but this was an industry meant for kids, teens and adults. Not toddlers. That’s why, when you see a game about Sesame Street, you get confused as to who would actually buy it. And that answer, in my opinion, is guilty parents spending too much time on the console and want to justify their purchase with video games for their youngest children. These games are too insultingly simple, too overpriced and provide NOTHING for anybody else in a family, so they are just there to be purchased to get the kids to shut up. Video game babysitting, basically. What’s the point of creating a functional or engaging expensive game when you can just plaster Peppa Pig on the cover, and wait for the money to roll in from the parents who don’t know any better, or are just letting their kids nag them into buying them? It’s ingenious, really. CD’s are cheap to produce and copy as well, WAY better than big cuddly toys. I mean, at least NES cartridges for Nintendo Systems were on a console with a simple controller - but a PS1 controller? With its awkward shape, analog sticks, d pad, start and select button, stick push-in buttons, 4 face buttons and 4 trigger buttons? WHAT WERE THEY THINKING. KIDS GAMES. REALLY. Anyway - get ready for some quality gameplay today, everyone. In this feature, you will find an Elmo’s Number Journey review with Elmo’s Number Journey gameplay, Elmo’s Letter Adventure review with Elmo’s Letter Adventure gameplay, Barbie Race and Ride review with Barbie Race and Ride gameplay, Barbie Explorer review with Barbie Explorer gameplay (which PBG or PeanutButterGamer took a look at), Rayman Junior review with Rayman Junior gameplay or Rayman Brain Games review with Rayman Brain Games gameplay (which AntDude took a look at), Easter Bunny’s Big Day review with Easter Bunny’s Big Day gameplay, Bear in the Big Blue House review with Bear in the Big Blue House gameplay, Fisher Price Rescue Heroes PS1 review with Rescue Heroes PS1 gameplay that was based on the Molten Menace set, Sesame Street Sports review with Sesame Street Sports gameplay, and probably in the most confusing name change overseas, a Party Time with Winnie the Pooh review with Party Time with Winnie the Pooh gameplay…….which in the US, is called Disney Pooh’s Party Game in Search of the Treasure review, with Disney Pooh’s Part Game in Search of the Treasure gameplay. My head hurts. And so do my small hands.
Let me know which of these PS1 educational games you dreamt about when you were falling asleep listing to this relaxing video!
#sleepingsounds #fallasleep #sleepingmusic #ASMR #ps1games