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Forestia is a 1998 point-and-click edutainment video game by French developer Daddy Oak. With a first-person presentation mixing traditional animation and pre-rendered 3D, the player explores a forest, collecting flora and funga and photographing fauna. There are 9 chapters to complete, randomly ordered.
A video game walkthrough is a guide aimed towards improving a player's skill within a particular video game and often designed to assist players in completing either an entire video game or specific elements. Walkthroughs may alternatively be set up as a playthrough, where players record themselves playing through a game and upload or live ...
Everdell is a board game for 1 to 4 players (or 1 to 6 players with expansions) designed by James Wilson and published by Starling Games in 2018. In the game, players take the role of forest animals building a city over four seasons by collecting resources, recruiting workers, and constructing buildings.
Video games which primarily take place in forest settings. Subcategories. This category has only the following subcategory. V. Video games set in jungles (1 C, 14 P)
In Lost Secret of the Rainforest, the second installment in the series, Adam, now slightly older and able to speak with animals as a matter of course, explores the tropical rainforest in search of a cure of a disease afflicting the local Indigenous peoples of South America, and a way to save the rainforest from destruction.
The Crystal Rainforest was part of the Mission Control series developed by Sherston Software, [1] a software company based in the United Kingdom. [2] [3] In the early 1990s, it was initially released for the Acorn Archimedes computer platform in 1992. [2] In 1999, a later version of The Crystal Rainforest was released for Microsoft Windows and ...
Shortly after its debut, Majesco picked the game up for North American distribution under the title Eco Creatures: Save the Forest [5] and released it on March 4, 2008. [1] Rising Star Games followed suit the following April by promising a European publication; [8] the game was released in the region as Ecolis: Save the Forest on June 13. [3]
The School Library Journal praised the game for its variety and rich content in animals, ecosystems and preservation. [5] The game was reviewed in the Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Guide Book where it was described as "a gorgeous program, a multimedia must-have. Comparable to a beautiful coffeetable book about animals and zoo life, but better!"