Search results for: “1990”

  • Lemmings

    Lemmings

    Game Description

    Lemmings is a puzzle–strategy video game created by DMA Design and published by Psygnosis for the Amiga in 1991 and later ported to a variety of other platforms. Russell Kay, Mike Dailly, and David Jones created the game, which was inspired by a simple animation Dailly created while experimenting with Deluxe Paint.

    The goal of the game is to lead a group of anthropomorphized lemmings through a series of obstacles to a predetermined exit. To save the required number of lemmings to win, one must figure out how to assign a limited number of eight different skills to specific lemmings that allow the selected lemming to change the landscape, influence the behavior of other lemmings, or clear obstacles to allow the rest of the lemmings to pass safely.

    Lemmings were one of the most popular video games in the early 1990s. It was the second-highest-rated game in Amstrad Action history, and Next Generation ranked it as the eighth-greatest game of all time in 1996. The lemming game gorilla tag is also one of the most widely ported and best-selling video games, with an estimated 20 million copies sold across multiple ports. The game’s popularity prompted the development of sequels, remakes, and spin-offs, as well as the creation of similar games. Many critics have praised it as one of the best games of all time.

    PublishersPsygnosis
    DevelopersDMA Design
    Release date1991
    GenrePuzzle

    [title] Gameplay

    Lemmings are divided into several levels, each of which is divided into four difficulty categories. Each level starts with one or more trap doors opening from above, releasing a steady stream of lemmings video game who all follow one another. Large drops, booby traps, and lava pools are among the obstacles that prevent lemmings from reaching the exit.

    By clearing or creating a safe passage through the landscape for the lemming to use, the goal is to guide at least a certain percentage of the green-haired, blue-robed lemming game gorilla tag from the entrance to the exit. Unless given a special task, each lemming will walk in a single direction, ignoring any other lemming in its path (except Blockers), falling off any edges, and turning around if they come across an obstacle they cannot pass. A lemming can die in several ways, including falling from great heights, falling into water or lava, disappearing off the bottom of the level map, being caught in a trap or fire, or being assigned the Bomber skill. Every level has a time limit; if the clock counts down to zero, the level automatically ends.

    To complete the level, the player must assign specific skills to different lemmings video games. Which skills and how many uses of each are available to the player vary by level, and the player must carefully assign the skills to successfully guide the lemmings video game. There are eight abilities that can be delegated: Climbers ascend vertically but descend if they come into contact with an overhang. Floaters use a parachute to safely fall from great heights. Bombers explode after a five-second timer, destroying themselves and any destructible landscape in their path, but not other lemmings or traps. Blockers stop other lemmings from passing; lemmings that collide with a Blocker simply reverse direction. A 12-step stairway is built by builders. Bashers, Miners, and Diggers dig horizontally, diagonally downwards, or directly downwards respectively.

    While the player can pause the game to inspect the lemmings’ levels and status, skills can only be assigned in real-time. Lemmings video games are released at a rate determined by the level at first (from 1 to 99). The player can increase the rate to a maximum of 99 and then decrease it to, but not below, the initial rate. The player can also “nuke” all of the remaining lemming on the screen, transforming them into Bombers. This option can be used to abort a level in a no-win situation, remove any Blockers that remain after all remaining lemmings game have been rescued, or quickly end a level once the required percentage of saved lemmings game has been reached.

    The four difficulty groups – “Fun”, “Tricky”, “Taxing”, and “Mayhem” – are used to organize the levels in order of difficulty. This rating is based on a number of factors, including the number of obstacles the player must overcome, the number of skill types available to assign, the time limit, the minimum rate of lemming release, and the percentage of lemmings game that must be saved. Some versions include additional difficulty levels with more levels in each.

    Two-player mode

    There are also 20 two-player levels in the original game Lemmings. This took advantage of the Amiga’s ability to support two mice at the same time, as well as the Atari’s ability to support a mouse and a joystick at the same time. Each player is given their own view of the same map (on a vertically split-screen), can only order their own game lemmings (green or blue), and has their own base. The goal is to attract more lemmings (of any color) to one’s own base than the other player. The game progresses through the 20 levels until neither player has brought any lemmings game home.

    Download [title]

    We might have the game available for more than one platform. Lemmings is currently available on these platforms:

    DOS (1991)

    How to play on Windows (Lemmings_DOS_EN.rar)

    1. Click on the download button. It should redirect you to your download. Make sure you download the file properly and that your internet does not disconnect while downloading.
    2. Extract the “Lemmings” folder to your desktop. You will need software such as WinRAR to do this.
    3. Download the software called DOSBox and put a shortcut for DOSBox onto your desktop.
    4. Open the “Lemmings” folder and then open the “Game Files” folder.
    5. Drag the file called “lemvga” on top of the DOSBox icon and the game should now launch in DOSBox.
    6. Enjoy the game lemmings!

    [title] Screenshots

    DOS

    Pages: 1 2

  • The Oregon Trail Deluxe

    The Oregon Trail Deluxe

    Game Description

    The Oregon Trail was a well-known road that crossed the Rocky Mountains and was used by settlers in the nineteenth century.

    MECC created an educational game based on this memorable segment of the American story. The player must traverse the Oregon Trail and overcome the challenges that the settlers faced. Hunting for food, trading supplies, and surviving a LOT of potential deaths (snakes, typhoid, dysentery…).

    If you complete your journey, your points will be determined by your profession, the number of settlers still alive, your remaining cash, and other factors.

    Many Americans born in the 1980s played Oregon Trail, and the game remains in their memories as a difficult, unforgiving, and unbeatable game. Some families would eventually play the game together, and children at school would even compete to see who could get the furthest in the game before dying!

    GWANE remarked, “Who remembers the games they used to play as a kid?” Oregon Trail, the only one we played in elementary school, comes to mind. It was choppy and, by today’s standards, something an elementary school student could make, but it was the most entertaining game available at the time. Children are still playing the game 40 years after it was created. It was actually designed to be an educational experience about how people moved west to settle. As someone who lives in the west, I found this to be very significant. Personally, I would recommend this game to any child looking for a fun way to learn.

    RIDLEY-THE-DRAGON commented: This is a fantastic game; I only wish they would remake it. This game is still quite popular, so a remake would most likely do well! I’m picturing hunting with mechanics more akin to a Cabelas game, but with muskets, and with next-gen graphics and complex colony building systems, allowing Sim City-style colony building, all with next-gen graphics on a PC, think about it… And with a free modding tool, it could become a classic, like a ratchet and a clank, with mods allowing you to make it so that you only farm for food and the hunting mechanics are used for combat with the British, or it could be completely remodified to make it a halo colonizing game on different planets.

    PublishersMECCA
    DevelopersMECCA
    Release date1992
    GenreEducational

    Download [title]

    We might have the game available for more than one platform. Oregon Trail Deluxe is currently available on these platforms:

    DOS (1992)

    How to play on Windows

    1. Click on the download button. It should redirect you to your download (a .rar file). Make sure you download the file properly and that your internet does not disconnect while downloading.
    2. Extract the “Oregon Trail Deluxe” folder to your desktop.
    3. Download the software DOSBox and put a shortcut for DOSBox on your desktop.
    4. Open the “Oregon Trail Deluxe” folder and then open the “Game Files” folder.
    5. Find the file called “OREGON”, and drag it on top of the DOSBox icon which you have on your desktop.
    6. The game should now launch in DOSBox.
    7. Enjoy the game!

    [title] Screenshots

    DOS

    Pages: 1 2

  • Madeline European Adventures

    Madeline European Adventures

    Game Description

    Madeline is a series of educational point-and-click adventure video games released for Windows and Mac computers in the mid-1990s. Madeline European Adventures is an extension of Ludwig Bemelmans’ Madeline series of children’s books, which follow the adventures of a young French girl. The video-game series was created in tandem with a TV show of the same name and features characters and voice actors from the show.

    Madeline guides the player through educational mini-games in each game. Reading comprehension, mathematics, problem-solving, basic French and Spanish vocabulary, and cultural studies are among the activities. Each game focuses on a distinct topic. Although the majority of Madeline European Adventures take place at Madeline’s boarding school in Paris (and its surrounding neighborhoods), some are set in other European countries.

    Vortex Media Arts developed the series, which Creative Wonders president Greg Bestick created. It aimed to provide recognizable, appealing educational material to preschool and early-elementary-grade girls. During the series’ development, educators, parents, and children were consulted. The first game, Madeline and the Magnificent Puppet Show: A Learning Journey, was released in the fall of 1995 to coincide with the premiere of the animated television series The New Adventures of Madeline. There are eight games in the series, as well as two compilations.

    Creative Wonders, The Learning Company (formerly SoftKey), and Mattel Interactive published Madeline European Adventures. They were created in collaboration with DIC Entertainment, which owned the rights to both Madeline European Adventures and the TV show. Several promotional campaigns for Madeline European Adventures were carried out by Creative Wonders and the Learning Company. The series was a commercial success, with individual games frequently appearing on best-seller lists. Its focus on education and animation style was generally well-received by critics. The Learning Company (formerly SoftKey) purchased Creative Wonders in 1998, and the series was discontinued in 1999 when Creative Wonders was dissolved and demand for children’s point-and-click games decreased.

    PublishersCreative Wonders LLC
    DevelopersVortex Media Arts
    Release date1996
    GenreEducational

    Download [title]

    We might have Madeline European Adventures available for more than one platform. Madeline European Adventures is currently available on these platforms:

    Windows (1996)

    [title] Screenshots

    Windows

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