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Toontown Online, commonly known as Toontown, was a 2003 massively multiplayer online role-playing game ... play trolley games, go fishing, kart racing, or golfing. By ...
These attractions included Toontown Trolley, a simulator ride through Toontown aboard a new character named Gus the Bus; Toon Coaster, a roller coaster based on the short Roller Coaster Rabbit; Baby Herman's Runaway Baby Buggy Ride, a ride based on the short Tummy Trouble; and a Benny the Cab ride, which evolved into Roger Rabbit's Car Toon Spin.
Toontown Online: Closed 3D Fantasy, Cartoon Freemium 2003 2013 Designed for families, mostly targeted towards children. Toontown Rewritten: Active 3D Fantasy, Cartoon Free-to-play 2014 Standalone Fan-made revival of Toontown Online, created using publicly available downloads and information. Torn: Active Text Crime (mafia) Free-to-play 2004 Browser
Toontown, a fictional city in the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit Mickey's Toontown , a themed land at Disneyland and Tokyo Disneyland Toontown Online , a now-defunct 2003 Disney video game
Toontown has many buildings around the outdoor area which the player can enter. To defeat enemies, the player needs to procure a weapon. Roger has three heart points, that deplete when he takes damage. The player can regain health by collecting carrots. Scattered in the game are traps and ambushing weasels waiting to hurt Roger.
1 Games. 2 Linguistics. 3 Transportation. 4 Other uses. 5 See also. ... Toontown Rewritten, a fan-made revival of the online role-playing game Toontown Online ...
Judge Doom is a fictional character and the main antagonist in the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit, portrayed by Christopher Lloyd.He is depicted as the much-feared, cruel and evil judge of Toontown, who later in the film is revealed as the mastermind behind the framing of the titular character and the murder of protagonist Eddie Valiant's brother.
Jesse N. Schell (born June 13, 1970) is an American video game designer and author, as well as the CEO of Schell Games, [2] and a distinguished professor of the practice of entertainment technology at CMU's Entertainment Technology Center (ETC), a joint master's program between the College of Fine Arts and School of Computer Science in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.