The familiar December routine of a Scout Elf watching from a high shelf becomes a hands-on adventure in The Elf on the Shelf: Christmas Heroes. This side-scrolling platformer from publisher Outright Games asks players to do more than observe and instead take action to protect the season. The setup lands fast and stays clear: Christmas Spirit has dropped to a dangerously low level, and Santa Claus calls on his Scout Elves to collect the energy needed to keep Christmas on track.
You play as an elf-in-training, starting at the North Pole for a quick orientation before receiving an assignment in the human world. The story shifts you into a single family home, giving the game a small, personal stage for its holiday mission. Early on, it leans into customization through naming, letting you pick a playful identity for your elf with options like “Cookie Icybuttons” or “Peppermint Fluffysocks.”
From there, the main routine is consistent: your elf sneaks through everyday spaces like shelves, counters, and spots behind furniture to gather scattered Christmas Spirit and finish small challenges. That structure signals the target audience immediately. This is a calm, kid-first game built around comfort, safety, and steady forward motion.
Structure and Platforming Simplicity
Progression uses the holiday calendar as a guiding frame. The game is split into 24 main stages, each shown as a window on an advent calendar, so the level list itself mirrors the countdown to Christmas Day. The settings alternate between North Pole locations, including snow-dusted workshop corridors and decorated postal rooms, and the human home’s living areas and bedrooms lined with ornaments.
Movement stays intentionally accessible. Your elf has a compact toolset built around jumping, dashing, and swinging with an elf rope to cross gaps. Stage hazards follow the same gentle tone, leaning into seasonal toys like small animated trains and wooden nutcrackers. Across every level, the central goal remains the same: collect Christmas Spirit, shown as sparkling, glittery clouds placed throughout the environment.
Failure is handled in a way that keeps tension low. Taking a hit or falling costs you a small portion of Spirit, which spills out and trails behind your elf. The comparison point is clear: it works like Sonic the Hedgehog dropping rings after damage. You also get a short window to recover what you lost by stepping back and grabbing it again. That design choice keeps momentum intact, since mistakes rarely force a full restart. Accessibility options reinforce the same philosophy, including an invincibility mode and auto-collect features that help very young players reach the end of each stage.
To vary the pace, each level hides three “magical doors” that lead to short minigames. These side activities include memory and card matching, jigsaw puzzles, ornament sorting, and simple maze runs. The platforming routes themselves follow a linear path, yet the game ties advancement to these minigames through Golden Hearts. You earn hearts by completing the door challenges, and you need a set number to unlock later platforming stages. That requirement turns the minigames into part of the main structure, adding light puzzle work to the collecting routine.
Mechanical depth stays functional and straightforward. The gameplay cycle runs on a repeatable set of steps: gather Spirit, avoid hazards, clear required minigames, move on. That rhythm supports short, easy play sessions and fits the same lane as licensed children’s games like the PAW Patrol platformers. Power-ups appear, yet they remain limited and situational. Items like a candy cane grappling hook or a freezing snowball show up at specific planned moments, so the game keeps players on a guided track instead of pushing experimentation or advanced techniques. Players with a lot of platforming experience may find that simplicity reduces long-term pull.
Aesthetic and Audio Analysis
Visually, the game does a strong job translating the cozy, book-like feel of the source material into an immediately festive world. The art is bright and colorful, aiming for warmth first. Environments come packed with seasonal detail: strings of lights, candy canes, snowflakes, and piles of glowing toys built around familiar reds, greens, and crisp whites. The result stays consistently pleasant to look at, especially for the audience it serves.
From a technical standpoint, the game aims for clean presentation rather than cutting-edge spectacle, even on hardware like the PS5. Textures read crisp, loading is quick, and transitions between main stages and minigames feel smooth, which supports the pick-up-and-play structure. One drawback appears in reported performance issues: some players have mentioned occasional screen tearing, a strange blemish given the modest demands of the visuals.
Audio supports the same seasonal tone. Music leans into cheerful Christmas-style melodies that sit comfortably in the background without demanding attention. Sound effects match the toy-like setting, with simple menu blips and light bell jingles tied to the elf’s actions. A major accessibility feature is full voice acting, with tutorials often delivered by Santa. That choice helps children who are still learning to read, though repeated guidance can wear thin for older players sitting alongside them.
Audience and Enduring Appeal
The Elf on the Shelf: Christmas Heroes knows exactly who it is for and builds every system around that group. It fits best for very young players, especially ages three to seven, and for families looking for a seasonal game that stays gentle and low pressure. Controls stay intuitive, and the difficulty curve sits close to the floor, making it a friendly entry point for kids getting comfortable with a controller.
That same simplicity shapes the experience for older players. Kids around nine and up, along with adults familiar with deeper platformers, will likely spot the limited complexity quickly. The level layouts stay straightforward, and the core loop repeats with few surprises. For that crowd, the holiday theme becomes the main draw, and it may fade once the novelty wears off.
Replay value comes mainly from presentation and collection goals. The game encourages revisiting stages to chase perfect completion by collecting every last piece of Christmas Spirit. Between levels, customization offers a small ritual, letting players unlock and swap accessories, tops, and bottoms for their elf.
The advent calendar structure remains the clearest long-range hook, since it naturally invites a “one level a day” routine during the season. The lasting appeal rests on the strength of the Elf on the Shelf name and the game’s steady delivery of holiday atmosphere, paired with a cozy, safe, family-friendly style of play.
The Review
The Elf on the Shelf: Christmas Heroes
The Elf on the Shelf: Christmas Heroes successfully captures the charm and simplicity of its holiday tradition. It is a highly accessible, low-stress platformer with a vibrant, welcoming aesthetic perfect for its intended audience of very young players and families seeking seasonal cheer. While its gameplay is mechanically simple and lacks the depth to engage seasoned gamers for long, it fulfills its purpose as a safe, festive experience. The advent calendar structure and cozy atmosphere make it an enjoyable custom for the holiday season.
PROS
- Forgiving failure states and simple controls ideal for new players.
- Vibrant, charming visuals and cheerful music.
- 24 levels designed around an engaging advent calendar theme.
- Elf naming and outfit selection add personal appeal.
CONS
- Gameplay is repetitive and too simple for older or experienced gamers.
- Graphics do not push hardware limits.
- Occasional screen tearing reported.
- Requires minigame completion to unlock levels.























































