Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party is a party game released by Ubisoft in 2008 for the Nintendo Wii. Ubisoft Paris developed the title as the fourth entry in the Rabbids series and the third mini-game collection starring the loud, bug-eyed bunnies. The game ties every activity to a television theme, with each mini-game styled as a fake TV show, channel, or commercial parody. Players pick a Rabbid avatar and hop between days of the week, completing rounds of short challenges that poke fun at sports broadcasts, sci-fi serials, reality shows, and old movies. The Wii Remote and Nunchuk drive the action through tilting, shaking, pointing, and rhythm taps. A standout feature lets the Wii Balance Board work as a controller for sled rides, surfing levels, and dance numbers, which was a fresh idea at the time of release. The bright art style, slapstick humor, and short play sessions made the game a popular pick for family game nights and casual Wii owners.
Updated: Jun 22, 2026
Screenshots

4.4 GB · Wii ROMs
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Specifications
| Platform | Wii ROMs |
|---|---|
| Genre | Action |
| File Size | 4.4 GB |
| Release Year | 2008 |
| Developer | Ubisoft Paris |
| Updated | Jun 22, 2026 |
Overview
Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party is a party game released by Ubisoft in 2008 for the Nintendo Wii. Ubisoft Paris developed the title as the fourth entry in the Rabbids series and the third mini-game collection starring the loud, bug-eyed bunnies. The game ties every activity to a television theme, with each mini-game styled as a fake TV show, channel, or commercial parody. Players pick a Rabbid avatar and hop between days of the week, completing rounds of short challenges that poke fun at sports broadcasts, sci-fi serials, reality shows, and old movies. The Wii Remote and Nunchuk drive the action through tilting, shaking, pointing, and rhythm taps. A standout feature lets the Wii Balance Board work as a controller for sled rides, surfing levels, and dance numbers, which was a fresh idea at the time of release. The bright art style, slapstick humor, and short play sessions made the game a popular pick for family game nights and casual Wii owners.
The game packs over sixty mini-games spread across themed channels, including sports, music, shooting galleries, and quick reflex tests. Up to four players can join in local multiplayer, taking turns or competing head to head on a split screen. A score-based career mode tracks progress across the weekly schedule, with new shows unlocking as players earn trophies. Score tables, customisable Rabbid outfits, and prop collectibles give a light progression hook to the chaos. The soundtrack covers licensed pop and rock tracks used in the dance and rhythm games, while original tunes back the comedic skits. Bonus content includes a virtual TV remote that lets players flip between filler clips and silly Rabbid skits at any time. Track variety covers winter slopes, dance floors, racing courses, and shooter arenas, so the pace rarely slows down. The mix of party fun, physical play, and goofy humor makes Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party one of the most fondly remembered casual titles on the Wii.