Hansel and Gretel is of course Hansel and Gretel. Though the box cover calls them "Lost Children", in the accompanying storybook, the German translation refers to them by name. All the other languages (English, French, Spanish, Danish, Greek) refer to them as "children." I bet this is because the translator wasn't certain what the local equivalents of the names were.
I had a lot more fun with the Snow White set. Hansel and Gretel, by comparison, seems a little bare bones. A few big accessories are not critical to the story (like a huge shrub with mushrooms and a bag of fancy rocks). Whereas the oven, which the witch gets shoved into, is not included as an accessory. Also, though the witch's house is described as having a lot of bread and confections, only a tray of cookies and a single bread piece is provided. Firewood for the woodcutter might have been an alternatively nice addition.
On the positive, the cage that held Hansel and the stick he used to trick the witch is included.
The klickies are not bad and are re-usable. I would rather the witch not had the candy painted on her chest, for re-usability.
I didn't feel this set was as versatile as Snow White regarding play options. But, I guess you'd really have to ask a kid about that.
-Tim