Through entertaining, fully animated sequences, children can explore the streets of Richard Scarry's Busy town and choose places and friends to visit. Inside the many shops are games and surprises and opportunities to practice important pre-reading skills!
The Treehouse is an educational point-and-click personal computer game developed for MS-DOS and then ported to Macintosh and the FM Towns, with Windows versions arriving later.
She's your cybernetic fantasy!
You've got a hot date with Valerie! Explore Val's "virtual world" and learn the true meaning of the term cybererotica!
An intuitive point-and-click interface makes Virtual Valerie virtually yours to play with. She's your cybernetic fantasy and you control the action! Hilarious rip-roaring entertainment in a sexploration adventure!
Halloween Night II is a 1989-1991 children's game by BugByte Inc. for Macintosh. On Halloween night, monsters knock at your door looking for candy. You hand them candy, cheer them up, and wait for the next monster to come by. While you're waiting, you can pet your cat or look out the window.
Math Blaster Mystery is aimed at children of ages 10 and up. The program offers up to four activities, each of which comes in four progressively more difficult levels.
Easy Street is an educational shopping game.
The player controls a small child who must travel Easy Street, to go to the local stores to buy the items on their shopping list. The player must choose which store is appropriate to buy the items on the top of the screen, entering the store, and choosing the correct item. On more difficult levels, the player must choose how much to pay for the item. To complicate matters, the player will get approached by Knuckles the Gorilla, and if he is able to hop onto the player's wagon, the player will not be able to enter any more stores, and must restart their shopping trip. When the player has gathered all required items, they can return home with their shopping complete.
A freeware game distributed in the late 80s via Macintosh's HyperCard system. It is a point-and-click adventure game where, after spending time in cryostasis a lone astronaut crash lands on earth. Seeking shelter in an abandoned mall the player must find a way out and figure out what happened to the Earth.
This computer coloring book is another part in the Electric Crayon series and it has 26 pictures of different Dinosaurs to color.
Pictures could be colored from a palette of 16 colors. A mix button would "mix" the current color with the 15 other colors and give a total of 256 colors. Choosing a color and clicking in the picture do a color fill in the area clicked. The finished, or in progress, coloring was automatically saved to disk. Player may also remove all colors applied previously to start coloring from the very beginning.
Pictures could be printed with, or without, a monthly calendar, description, message, banner, etc.
Billed as an "interactive cyber event," this interactive hypercard stack is said to have been found by by creator Amendant Hardiker among some Babelian ruins dated back to 9999 BC, then deciphered from a since forgotten machine language. It is thought that Zaum Gadget was a subliminal event-structure capable of subtly manipulating the beliefs of any participant.
Inspired by Russian futurism, Zaum is a unique digital experience.
Zoo is a computer game developed by Radarsoft and published by Philips. The game was programmed by Cees Kramer and was released in 1987 for the MSX 2 computer. The game is a point and click adventure. The player must solve a mystery in a zoo. The game is equipped with various humorous game elements. The game was only published in Dutch.
Early interactive erotica program developed using MacroMind VideoWorks, featuring a pixellated woman named 'Maxie' and a selection of sex toys which can be used on her. One of the first games to include a 'panic button,' hiding the game behind a fake spreadsheet.
Rhyme Land is a simple rhyming game for the Apple II.
Players can choose from a number of different cartoon animals, including: foxes, cats, mice, dragons, frogs, bees, and snakes. They then must choose if the displayed words rhyme or don't rhyme with the animal.
Rhymo's Falling Star is 1 - 2 player educational word game for the Apple II.
Players compete in 3 slightly different challenges, where they must type matching rhyming words. In each challenge, the player must complete a total of 15 rhyming words to either help Rhymo catch a falling star, save creatures from a dying planet, or reach his spaceship. Each challenge contains 2 different difficulty levels. At the easier level, the player must type the two words that rhyme. At the harder level, the player is given a word with the first letter missing, and the player must choose 2 of 5 letters that will complete this word. As the player successfully answers questions, they get closer to their goal of helping Rhymo.
Rhymo's Falling Star is 1 - 2 player educational word game for the Apple II.
Players compete in 3 slightly different challenges, where they must type matching rhyming words. In each challenge, the player must complete a total of 15 rhyming words to either help Rhymo catch a falling star, save creatures from a dying planet, or reach his spaceship. Each challenge contains 2 different difficulty levels. At the easier level, the player must type the two words that rhyme. At the harder level, the player is given a word with the first letter missing, and the player must choose 2 of 5 letters that will complete this word. As the player successfully answers questions, they get closer to their goal of helping Rhymo.
Reader Rabbit is an educational game for children 3 through 7 designed to help reading and spelling skills. There are four different word games to play of increasing difficulty: a word sorter, a picture labeler, the word train, and a variation of the game memory.