Spy fox in dry cereal dos
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Notably, most of their Adventure Games change the locations of the respective Plot Coupons each playthrough.Īll demo download links are listed on their pages, since finding them is a bit of a Guide Dang It!. The fanbase is still strong, however, and continue to remember the games from their childhood.
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Many of their IOS ports were re-released, and were also released on Android as well. A list of the games currently available can be found here.
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In January 2014, Tommo relaunched the Humongous brand, and as of April 17, 2014, Tommo started rolling their old point-and-click games out onto Steam with the help of Nightdive Studios, most famous for re-introducing PC games like System Shock 2 and I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream.
This didn't go on well with fans, alongside several other titles that Atari owned. note The creator of the Neo Geo X, which got some backlash and even got SNK Playmore so incensed that they wanted to retract the license, which Tommo defied and resulted in an ongoing lawsuit.
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itself, alongside the Junior Adventure series and the trademark, was purchased by Tommo, Inc. During the company's bankruptcy sale in 2013, several companies purchased several assets: Moonbase Commander was bought by Rebellion, Backyard Sports was bought by Epic Gear LLC, Total Annihilation was bought by Wargaming, while Humongous, Inc. all filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in order to split away from the profit-lossing Atari SA (the former Infogrames Entertainment). In 2013, Atari, Inc., Atari Interactive, Inc. In 2011, Atari began to release several Humongous titles on IOS, ported by Nimbus Games.
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The Backyard Sports series continued for several more years, while three of the Junior Adventure games were ported to the Wii with Majesco as publisher (under license from Infogrames/Atari), but they were soon pulled after the porters used ScummVM (a virtual machine made to run old Scumm-based games) without giving any credit to the developers whatsoever, so this had ended. as an IP/holding company for Humongous' properties. Immediately after the closure, Infogrames formed Humongous, Inc. This never occured, and Humongous Entertainment was shuttered on that month as planned. (GT Interactive) sold Humongous to Infogrames Entertainment SA (the holding company) on the verge that Humongous would develop a game before March 2006 or they would be completely shuttered (by this point, the Backyard Sports series was developed by other developers). The Backyard Sports continued on with more yearly installments, becoming Atari's equivalent to the EA Sports and 2K brands. Humongous published the last two titles in the Junior Adventure series - Pajama Sam: Life Is Rough When You Lose Your Stuff, and Putt-Putt: Pep's Birthday Surprise. The only original title produced by this point was MoonBase Commander, released in 2002, and sold so poorly that Infogrames soon began to give up on the studio.Īfter their rebrand to Atari in 2003. The founders soon left the studio after Infogrames constantly rejected their ideas for titles, and even tried to purchase back the studio which failed at the last minute due to the purchase being the day of the dot-com bubble bursting. Junior Adventure titles became more dominant after Infogrames saw the Backyard Sports franchise to be the the only reason Humongous made a profit at this point. publishing Humongous' games from then on. Cavedog went on to produce Total Annihilation: Kingdoms before being closed by GT Interactive in February 2000.Īround this time, GT Interactive was fully purchased by Infogrames, ending Humongous' independence by becoming solely a subsidiary with the newly-renamed Infogrames, Inc. By 1997, the company also began to create their only Licensed Games, based on Nickelodeon's Blue's Clues.
Through to the late-90's, another addition to the Junior Adventure series: SPY Fox was created, alongside two new series: Big Thinkers! and Backyard Sports. Dispite the purchase, GT kept Humongous and Cavedog independent from their own operations, and within this time the company continued to grow.
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In July 1996, GT Interactive Software purchased Humongous Entertainment. By 1995, Humongous expanded to mainstream titles with the formation of the Cavedog Entertainment brand, and released Total Annihilation. Soon after a while, the company continued what became the "Junior Adventure" series with Freddi Fish, and Pajama Sam joining the lineup, alongside the one-off Fatty Bear, and the Buzzy the Knowledge Bug series. The studio's first game was what would start off the Putt-Putt series: Putt-Putt Joins the Parade. Humongous was founded by Ron Gilbert of LucasArts fame and Shelley Day in 1992. Their five biggest franchises were, , and Backyard Sports, although they had plenty of other small franchises such as, , and Humongous Entertainment was a development studio that focused on children's computer games.