Is Monster House still worth playing in 2026?
Based on the 2006 animated film, this licensed tie-in ticks every box of a rushed cash-in: fussy camera, limp combat, throwaway puzzles, tiny runtime. Three-player co-op might have saved face, but the level design lacks ambition and the film's spooky charm evaporates. With a very low contemporary score, the verdict is plain: it aged poorly and barely mattered even at launch. Skip it unless completionism bites hard.