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Contraption maker free the balloon
Contraption maker free the balloon










contraption maker free the balloon
  1. Contraption maker free the balloon generator#
  2. Contraption maker free the balloon cracker#
  3. Contraption maker free the balloon series#

A ball landed on a flashlight, turning it on the flashlight shone through a magnifying glass and lit the candle in a hot air balloon the balloon lifted off into the air and floated off screen. I still clearly remember the first puzzle my family ever built the night we first played the game. You could tweak the gravity and watch bowling balls float off the top of the screen, you could spend an hour setting up a system of lasers to light a row of rocket fuses … or just create an overly complicated way to open a can and feed Curie the Cat, and then convince your mom to come and try to solve it. Piece of cake.Īnd once you got bored with solving the pre-made puzzles, the fun really began, because you could make your own. The basketball lands on Jack, who pops out and sends it flying into the basket. The basketball hits the mouse cage and makes Newton Mouse start to run, turning the crank. Put the Jack-in-the-Box near that yellow ramp piece, run a belt from Jack’s crank to the mouse in the wheel.

Contraption maker free the balloon generator#

Some puzzles were relatively easy (just bounce the pinball off the crocodile’s snout, then get the mouse in the hamster wheel to power the generator …) while others were much, much harder (I don’t think I ever solved that one stupid level with the pool table). The puzzle also gave you a limited selection of “parts” you could add to the machine in order to complete a basic objective: catch the cat under a laundry basket, launch a rocket, get the basketball in the basket.

contraption maker free the balloon

Contraption maker free the balloon series#

The game presented you with a series of puzzles, each set on a playing field containing a set of pre-placed objects: walls, ramps trapdoors, baseballs, electrical sockets, lasers, crocodiles, fireworks-you name it, the game had it. The game went through a couple iterations I think the version I had was version 2.0. Parrot jumps after cracker, and perch (F) tilts, upsetting seeds (G) into pail (H) …

Contraption maker free the balloon cracker#

Raising spoon to mouth (A) pulls string (B), thereby jerking ladle (C), which throws cracker (D) past parrot (E). And the best of all was a little game called The Incredible Machine.Įveryone’s heard of Rube Goldberg, right? The cartoonist who drew pictures of elaborate, impractical contraptions for performing simple tasks? Well, in the ’90s, programmers Jeff Tunnell and Kevin Ryan had the idea of turning it into a computer game.

contraption maker free the balloon

A fair amount of educational ones, of course (I still have dreams about trying to beat the advanced bonus levels in Math Blaster), but also one or two games that weren’t educational in the slightest that I loved, my bother loved, and more importantly, my parents loved, who would let us play as long as we wanted. That’s not to say we didn’t have computer games, though. (I know every shortcut and brick placement in that entire game, and I will fight anyone who doesn’t agree that it was fabulous.) The most advanced video game my brother and I had was a copy of the original LEGO Racers that we’d installed off a friend’s disk. Before that, in the days of high school, video games were anything I could a) run on our shared home desktop PC, and b) wouldn’t cause my mother to make us turn off the computer and go outside. It was my first month there, I was hanging out with some girls on my hall, I mentioned I was playing around with emulators on my computer, one girl recommended I try playing some game called Ocarina of Time … and the rest is Hylian history. I have a confession to make: I didn’t really start gaming until I got to college.












Contraption maker free the balloon