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Mixed-Up Mother Goose

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Mixed-Up Mother Goose
File:Mixed-Up Mother Goose cover.jpg
1992 Version Cover art
Developer(s)Sierra On-Line
Publisher(s)Sierra On-Line
Designer(s)Roberta Williams
EngineAGI (1987 version), SCI (1992 version)
Platform(s)MS-DOS, Windows, Amiga, Apple II, Apple IIGS, Atari ST, Macintosh, FM Towns
Release1987
Genre(s)Educational game, Adventure game
Mode(s)Single player

Roberta Williams' Mixed-Up Mother Goose is a computer game first released by Sierra On-Line in 1987. It is, in essence, an edutainment title, directed specifically at young gamers, as well as an adventure game.

Plot

The storyline of the game is very simple, as is common in games for children. One night, while preparing for bed, a child (which is the player's avatar) is sent into the dreamlike world of Mother Goose, who desperately needs his or her help. All the nursery rhymes in the land have gotten mixed up, with none of the inhabitants possessing the items necessary for their rhyme to exist. And so, the child will find themselves helping Humpty Dumpty find a ladder to scramble onto a wall, bringing the little lamb back to Mary and seeking out a pail for Jack and Jill, among others.

Gameplay

Gameplay is again rather simple. The AGI system, similar to the one used extensively in previous Sierra games (e.g. the Quest series: King's Quest, Police Quest, etc.), is utilized in the 1987 version. The player controls his or her characters using - almost exclusively - the four direction keys on the keyboard. When an item of interest comes into view, it is usually shown very clearly, so that younger gamers would not find it difficult to hunt it down. Walking close to an item is synonymous with picking it up and, as there is only one inventory window in the top-right corner of the screen, the character can only hold one object at a time. Inanimate objects can be found in houses or on the ground throughout the land, whereas living objects can only be found outdoors. In the case of living objects, the person or animal will follow behind the player so that they can be led back to the person or place they need to be to complete the rhyme. Human objects, such as Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater's wife, will also explain where they want to go in words and a "thought bubble". Some characters (namely Old King Cole) require several items brought to them in order to put their rhyme back together. All but one of the items are placed randomly throughout the land. There are 18 nursery rhymes to choose from, 20 items to recover, and many screens in which one can find the lost items. A point is awarded for each fixed rhyme. If a player finds it hard to match the objects with the rhymes, he or she can approach the characters who are in need of a specific part of their story and this item will be displayed above them in the form of a "thought bubble". It is also interesting to note that, at the beginning of the game, the player can select the character that will be used during the game, with 8 characters to choose from. The game can be saved, or more precisely, bookmarked (a feature which became prominent - and somewhat infamous - in some later Sierra games, including Phantasmagoria and King's Quest VII), at any time.

Other versions

Mixed-Up Mother Goose was remade by Sierra several times, bringing the total up to four different versions.

  • In 1990 (Mixed-Up Mother Goose Enhanced), it was remade using the SCI0 system, which naturally meant improved graphics.
  • In 1992 (Mixed-Up Mother Goose VGA/Multimedia CD), the game was remade, this time with more significant enhancements and changes. The first was the clearly visible change in graphics, resulting from Sierra's transition to VGA games. Second, the rhymes, whose tune was played in the previous versions, were given voices, each of them being sung separately, with the appropriate actions accompanying the music. Third, the interface was updated and became much easier and faster to navigate. Finally, the player was given a map of the land, if he or she should ever feel lost in the nursery rhyme world. This edition came out as a CD version with full digital speech, and as a floppy version in which only the rhymes were digitally recorded. The CD version used Sierra's SCI1 (early). The floppy version used Sierra's SCI1.1. The versions are not absolutely identical. For example, the CD version directly starts with the Mixed-Up Mother Goose main-menu. The floppy version starts with the animated Sierra logo. Main-menu button placements are also different.
  • In 1996, the final remake was released, entitled Mixed-Up Mother Goose Deluxe. It featured further improved SVGA graphics and a bonus audio CD, as well as the introduction of different melodies and styles of music.

Reception

Compute! stated "I can't think of a better way to teach kids the classical nursery rhymes".[1] It won the 1991 Software Publishing Association Excellence in Software Award for Best Early Education Program.[2]

List of nursery rhymes and items

Below is a list of nursery rhymes used in the game, along with corresponding items in parentheses:

Trivia

  • Two versions of Mixed-Up Mother Goose are included in The Roberta Williams' Anthology, a collection of games designed by Roberta Williams. Those are the original 1987 version and the 1992 multimedia CD remake.
  • The picture of Mother Goose on the original game box is actually Roberta Williams herself, with two children (not hers) reading a book of nursery rhymes, accompanied by several characters from the rhymes. The only other box cover she would star in would be the cover for Softporn Adventure.
  • The 1992 version of the game was Sierra's first CD-ROM game, as well as one of the first computer games to be released exclusively on CD.
  • In a later Sierra game, Space Quest V, one of the messages displayed upon dying was "Looks like you've been spreading yourself a bit thin lately. Perhaps you'd like to try one of our less challenging games like "Mixed Up Mother Goose?"
  • The "Classic's Reillustrated" version was also planned and announced for the Atari ST line of computersCite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). but was later cancelled. No word on whether a beta version exists or how far development went although it was announced via Sierra Online's magazine: Sierra News Magazine (Spring 1991) and owners were instructed to send disk #1 or the front cover of the manual along with a check or money order for $15 to upgrade their copy to the "Classic's Reillustrated" version.

See also

References

  1. ^ Trivette, Donald B. (April 1988). "Mother Goose". Compute!. p. 59. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  2. ^ "Celebrating Software". Computer Gaming World. June 1991. p. 64. Retrieved 17 November 2013.