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The Junior Field Trips series is a trilogy of point-and-click children's computer and video games released by Humongous Entertainment in conjunction with Random House.These games (in general) offered virtual tours of particular locations related to their theme, and included a game suite with virtual coloring pages, a scavenger hunt, and various other games depending upon the title.
ScummVM is a re-implementation of the part of the software used to interpret the scripting languages such games used to describe the game world rather than emulating the hardware the games ran on; as such, ScummVM allows the games it supports to be played on platforms other than those for which they were originally released with little or no ...
Big Thinkers (video game series) The Bizarre Adventures of Woodruff and the Schnibble; The Black Cauldron (video game) Blade Runner (1997 video game) Blazing Dragons (video game) Blue Force; Blue's 123 Time Activities; Blue's Birthday Adventure; Broken Sword II: The Smoking Mirror; Broken Sword: The Shadow of the Templars; Bud Tucker in Double ...
Pages in category "SCUMM games" The following 45 pages are in this category, out of 45 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Following his departure from LucasArts and co-founding of Humongous Entertainment in 1992, Gilbert struck a deal with LucasArts which would grant Humongous a license to use the SCUMM engine in the development of their games, on the condition that he continue to develop improvements to the engine for use by both companies. [3] For the game Full ...
For Steam the games were released as single games, [2] or bundled with the other Pajama Sam games in "Pajama Sam Complete Pack" [3] or was packaged with all Humongous Entertainment games in "Humongous Entertainment Complete Pack". [4] The games are available DRM-free from GOG.com as Pajama Sam volumes 1 and 2, using SCUMMVM and running on ...
In July 1996, Humongous Entertainment was purchased by GT Interactive for US$76 million. [9] In November 1997, Humongous Entertainment signed a five-year worldwide deal with Nickelodeon to develop games based on the Nick Jr. series, Blue's Clues, making it the first and only time that Humongous has developed games based on a licensed character as opposed to its original characters. [10]
Monkey Island creator Ron Gilbert, who left LucasArts after the completion of LeChuck's Revenge, went on to found Humongous Entertainment, in 1992. The company was primarily a children's game developer, but they also developed titles aimed at more mature audiences under the Cavedog Entertainment label. Humongous created several series of point ...