Here's a quick overview for Sprince and anyone else in case they can't be bothered to check out the front page

(but I wholeheartedly recommend the review over this hastily written post)...
Fantasy Comes To Life - three featurettes which focus pretty much on three scenes ("Happy Working Song", "That's How You Know", and "A Blast At The Ball"), with talking heads saying how they enjoyed working on the scenes, a couple technical explanations, and plenty of nice behind-the-scenes footage (from dailies, to rehearsals, to storyboards, to rough CGI, and of course, the final edited shot). They feel like smaller parts of a bigger documentary rather than three unique features. The only castmembers interviewed are Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey, and (for "Blast at the Ball" only) Susan Sarandon. The rest are all crew like director Kevin Lima, composers/lyricists Menken & Schwartz, producers, visual effects supervisors/producers, and choreographers. Also, they interview one of the old-man-dancers from "That's How You Know" who was in
Mary Poppins.
Deleted Scenes - inconsequential little bits that were better off deleted, the quasi-alternate opening is interesting, though. Kevin Lima provides an introduction to each scene.
-"A Lock of Prince Edward's Hair" - a storyboarded scene of Pip stealing Prince Edward's comb to get a lock of hair for Giselle. He fights a guard named Charlie and pulls out a larger-than-he-is hairball from his throat (eww).
-"Leaving Karate" - the original introduction to Robert, it shows him picking up Morgan at the Karate school (a new scene was written instead, and they used the second half of this scene - in the taxi - later in the movie)
-"I'm Not Waiting For My Prince" - a scene of Nancy at work, basically saying she's not a hopeless romantic because she doesn't want to be disappointed with romance.
-"Hot Dogs at the Bridge" - Giselle orders hot dogs for her and Edward and tries to get him to think about what happens after "happily ever after".
-"Nathaniel's Revelation" - While dressed as a taxi driver, Nathaniel talks to Pip-in-the-plastic-ball and realizes he's on the wrong side, and goes inside to stop Narissa.
-"End with a Twist" - a few extraneous shots from the finale that ended up being cut, among them the two old ladies talking ("Always with the effects!" or something like that), and Nancy waking up Edward.
Gag Reel - it's a gag reel, there's not much to say. All just family-friendly line flubs and trips, nothing outrageously funny or bleeped (*sigh*).
Pip's Predicament - I was all excited for this, expecting it to be an extended animated sequence that they chose to drop from the film. I hate to say it, but it really would have been better as the set-top game, as the pop-up style of this animated short makes it look really...well, cheap. If it were a set-top game, I can see it broken into four levels: (which is pretty much how the short is broken down into)
-Level 1: Finding Edward - in which we find him in a frozen spell, believing he's marrying Giselle
-Level 2: Find the Wand - in which we go to Narissa's lair and search her shelves for a magic wind
-Level 3: Find the Spell - in which we figure out what spell will make the wand work
-Level 4: Find Edward Again - in which we use magic nuts (!) to save Edward and send him to the real world to save Giselle.
Easter Eggs - not really easter eggs, just two bonus features that are easy to find but not given a title on the screen. The first is the music video for Carrie Underwood's "Ever Ever After" (a music note icon that's on the "Fantasy Comes to Life" sign) and the second is the promo spot for the Blu-Ray's "D-Files" feature (a "Hidden Mickey" icon).
There is no trailer for the film. Boo to Disney!
All in all, a sparse amount of features that really weren't worth me buying it early. I should've waited for street date to get the Target disc (of course, I'm going to anyway, so I'll have a spare copy of the film, which I'll give to Kram.). If there were a commentary, it'd be slightly more forgiveable.
Albert