Software:Stay Tooned! (video game)

From HandWiki
Short description: 1996 video game
Stay Tooned!
Stay Tooned CD Cover.jpg
CD cover art
Developer(s)Funnybone Interactive[1]
Publisher(s)Sierra On-Line[1]
Designer(s)
EngineMacromedia Director
Platform(s)
Release1996
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Stay Tooned! Unsweetened Multi-Game Experience![4] is a 1996 action-adventure video game that was developed by Funnybone Interactive and published by Sierra On-Line.[1] In the game, the player must navigate through the apartment complex to find the TV remote to zap rogue cartoon characters back into TV Land.[5]

Plot

The game begins in a large apartment building in the middle of an unnamed city. The player takes the place of an ordinary patron living in an apartment. The player starts off simply channel-surfing with a TV remote and watching short cartoons and commercials that parody real-life shows.[6] The shows parodied include Seinfeld, which is parodied as Whinefeld.[7] One channel has the game's chief programmer providing hints on how to play the upcoming game.

Several cartoon characters either forbid or encourage the player to push the red button on their remote as the player surfs the channels. When the player pushes the button, the cartoons break out of the television set, steal the remote, and cause the entire apartment complex to go into animated form. The player must recover the television remote, which is the only thing that can zap the escaped toons and send them back to TV Land, the fictional toon world found within the depths of the television. The player searches the other apartments for the remote while playing nearly thirty games contained within them and avoiding the destructive trickery committed by the escaped toons.

At the end of the game when the remote is retrieved, the player must zap all of the toons back into the television (and that includes extras such as the Überbugs and the penguins). Once all of the toons are captured, as a plot of revenge, Pixel demands Chisel that they can not let the player get away with this. Chisel grabs the player and warps them into the television. Once they make it into TV Land, the player gets flattened, and has the disturbing realization that in the process, the player has been turned into a toon as well.

Characters

The first five characters mentioned are the five toons you have to capture at the end of the game. The others serve as background characters. Most of the toons are against you, but some will help you in the game.

  • Pixel: Pixel is the main character of the game. She is the leader and the pink cat of the group. Pixel is a pink perfectionist and always wears a purple shirt. She's very mature and the only female of the group, although she's prone to irritability and temper tantrums. She is almost as destructive as Chisel and the smartest in the group. She is the subject of Schmooze's affections, feelings she does not return.
  • Chisel: Chisel is the second in-command of the group and the blue cat He wears a red cap. He is the most destructive of the toons, as he loves throwing explosives such as dynamite at everything he can, including the player. He is Pixel's twin brother.
  • Fiddle: Fiddle is a black and white cat. Fiddle is tall, skinny, and the most cowardly of the five toons. He is constantly chased by another anthropomorphic cat named Katrina, who has a huge crush on him. He is the least destructive of the toons and is the only one of the five who openly supports the player's efforts to find the remote and zap them home.
  • Schmooze: Schmooze is a short, orange anthropomorphic dog, and the most irritable of the toons. He's somewhat selfish and obnoxious, and hates the other dog in the group, Scoops. He is recognizable by his black bowler hat and red vest. He often has fantasies about being a rich sultan and is deeply in love with the group's leader, Pixel. Schmooze could be a bulldog.
  • Scoops: Scoops is the other dog in the group and arguably the most hyperactive and cheerful in the group. He often annoys Schmooze and has an obsessive love for gravy. He has an unusually good singing voice.
  • Frank: Frank is a heavily built up human toon who hates the other toons. He can be either the player's ally or enemy. He acts very tough and loves to pick fights.
  • Dr. Pickles: Dr. Pickles is a mad scientist bent on world domination. He conducts very painful experiments on the other toons and has the strange ability to open his head to his brain.
  • Mrs. Findley: Mrs. Findley is a middle-aged woman who is usually grouchy and a heavy smoker. She lives in Apartment 5D on the fifth floor, with her cats and lazy husband.
  • Katrina: Katrina is a tall white cat who adores Fiddle. She seeks to marry him and often attacks him with kisses. She is neutral in the player's fight against the toons.
  • Killtron: Killtron is the Magic Death Robot and an occasional enemy of the player. He only shows up in the vast hallways or at the Kartoon Kombat! game.
  • Al Extrabux: An obvious parody of Alex Trebek on the game show Schleopardy! (Also a parody of Jeopardy!).

Others

  • Purple Glop: As the name describes, a sentient purple pile of slime that intentionally stalls the player's mission.
  • Überbug: A German bug who seeks to take control of the player's fridge with his bug army.
  • Mr. Fishy: A proper, somewhat irritable herring.
  • Ben: The game's lead programmer; he often breaks the fourth wall and appears in hidden areas.
  • The Penguins: Very temperamental extras.
  • Cable Guy, Pizza Delivery Guy and Policeman: Three ordinary men who look exactly alike. The player is able to call them on the phone on the first floor. While the Pizza Delivery Guy serves as an extra, only the Cable Guy and the Policeman provide the player an advantage. The Cable Guy will fix the apartment complex's cable box once the player retrieves his missing sock from the downstairs laundry room. The Policeman can be used to gorge upon a sentient donut that blocks the players way in one of the rooms.

Gameplay

After the player lets the toons out of the television, several keys need to be retrieved to find the remote. The apartment complex has five floors to navigate (including the roof, the basement, and several hidden rooms). The player must complete numerous tasks to retrieve the keys, such as building a Rube Goldberg machine, and also includes abnormal tasks such as shaving Fiddle to the bone.

To retrieve the remote, the player must find an oven mitt for the oven in Apartment 5D, which houses the remote. Once the player gets the remote, various toons must be zapped, and once all of the toons are zapped into the television, the game is beaten.

Running the game on modern systems

For people attempting to play the game on PC running Windows 2000, XP, Vista, or 7, it is highly improbable due to the highly different structures of earlier operating systems. The game will run, however for Microsoft Virtual PCs with earlier versions of Windows. Macintosh users will likely find similar problems trying to run the game on the most recent versions of macOS, as the Classic function has been discontinued.

Reception

Reception
Review score
PublicationScore
The Electric Playground7.5/10[8]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lewis & Johnson (1996), p. 17.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Lewis & Johnson (1996), p. 16.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lewis & Johnson (1996), p. 2.
  4. Lewis & Johnson (1996), p. front cover.
  5. Lewis & Johnson (1996), p. 1.
  6. Lewis & Johnson (1996), p. 5.
  7. Pescovitz, David (July 5, 2019). "Whinefeld: the bizarre Seinfeld parody clip from the Stay Tooned! videogame (1996)". https://boingboing.net/2019/07/05/whinefeld-the-bizarre-seinfel.html. 
  8. James, Bonnie (December 5, 1996). "Stay Tooned! - Electric Playground". Greedy Productions. http://www.elecplay.com/pc/staytoon.html. ""If you find yourself getting up Saturday mornings to watch cartoons in your pajamas and eat sugar cereal on the couch, then I think you'll like Stay Tooned."" 

Bibliography

External links