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This is a list of notable educational video games. There is some overlap between educational games and interactive CD-ROMs and other programs (based on player agency), and between educational games and related genres like simulations and interactive storybooks (based on how much gameplay is devoted to education). This list aims to list games ...
Madeline is a series of educational point-and-click adventure video games which were developed during the mid-1990s for Windows and Mac systems. [1] [2] The games are an extension of the Madeline series of children's books by Ludwig Bemelmans, which describe the adventures of a young French girl.
October 1990: Lucasfilm Games Lucasfilm Games Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe: P-38: Lightning: MS-DOS: 1991: LucasArts LucasArts Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe: P-80: Shooting Star: MS-DOS: 1991: LucasArts LucasArts Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe: MS-DOS: August 1991: Lucasfilm Games Lucasfilm Games Star Wars: NES, Game Boy, Master System ...
The Sumerian Game: 1964: Mabel Addis, William McKay: The first edutainment game. Unnamed American football game [1] 1968 or before: Unknown: For the Dartmouth Time-Sharing System. One of "many games" in library of 500 programs. The Sumer Game: 1968: Doug Dyment: AKA Hamurabi: Highnoon: 1970: Christopher Gaylo: Baseball: 1971: Don Daglow: Oregon ...
In 1990 (Mixed-Up Mother Goose Enhanced), it was remade using the SCI0 system, which meant improved graphics. In 1991 (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 ...
From playing Gin Rummy with the family to spending hours on your computer playing Solitaire, these games are sure to take you down memory lane. More from AOL Games
Freedom! is a 1992 educational video game for the Apple II developed and published by the Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium (MECC). Based on similar gameplay from MECC's earlier The Oregon Trail, the player assumes the role of a runaway slave in the antebellum period of American history who is trying to reach the North through the Underground Railroad.
The goal of the game is to guide a small submarine through a variety of undersea caverns, collecting pieces of a ruined space capsule. Like other games by The Learning Company, Operation Neptune is educational and was intended for players age nine to fourteen (grades three through ten). [2] It was released as part of the Super Solvers series ...