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  • Greetings and today weve got a neat little program that I recently got in a box of goodies.

  • Awesome Animated Monster Maker, developed by the ImaginEngine Corporation and released

  • in 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Interactive for Macintosh and Windows PCs.

  • My interest was piqued as soon as I unboxed this in my October 2018 donations video, and

  • judging by the comments I got about it a fair number of you were as well.

  • While I don’t have any memories of playing this as a youngin, it sure seems like the

  • kind of thing I mightve enjoyed.

  • I mean just look at that cover art, I wouldve been all over this when I was 7 or 8 years old.

  • This program was one of the first pieces of software from HMI’s CreActive series in

  • the mid ‘90s.

  • A main selling point was that it included both enjoyable software for young children,

  • as well as some additional real world activities so that kids wouldn’t be sitting in front

  • of a computer all day.

  • So it wasn’t quite classified as edutainment, but it went out of its way to make a point

  • that kids could indeed still learn something from it.

  • Potentially, maybe, eh they tried.

  • Later entries in the Monster Maker series were more blatantly educational, but this

  • one really is just an activity center.

  • And it turns out that a sealed, original big box copy like this is pretty darn rare so

  • thanks again to Chris and Karen for the donation and the opportunity to crack it open and enjoy

  • the complete package like it’s 1995.

  • Straight away inside you get the A2M2 Activity Book, one of the biggest selling points if

  • the box’s marketing copy is to be believed.

  • Fun! Games! Puzzles!

  • Tricks and tips!

  • Even monstrous recipes and coloring book pages.

  • Yep, it’s a book of kids activities all right, very much reminding me of those booklets

  • found in supermarket checkout lines purchased by flustered parents as a last ditch effort

  • to get little Billy to calm the heck down during the final leg of a longer than anticipated

  • road trip to visit Aunt Gretchen in Rhode Island.

  • Next up is a brief pamphlet detailing more of Houghton Mifflin’s interactive computer

  • software thingymajigs, as well as a software registration card for registering the software

  • with a card.

  • And finally there’s the jewel case holding both the software

  • on CD-ROM and a small instruction manual.

  • The latter isn’t much to look at, mostly talking about how to install and troubleshoot

  • the thing, along with a grand total of three pages describing the product itself.

  • Which is fine, because once you get Awesome Animated Monster Maker installed you get a

  • debatably awesome non-animated monster maker tutorial walkinya through the whole thing.

  • -”Monster Maker lets you make a zillion different monsters!”

  • -”Click on the platforms to see new monster parts.”

  • -“Stick the parts together in the Monster Chamber to build the monster of your dreams!”

  • At any time you can jump into the main program where youll be greeted by Doctor Lizardlips:

  • a reptilian mad scientist in charge of the Main Lab.

  • -”Now YOU start dragging monster parts to the body!”

  • Well, the player’s the one in charge, while the doc stands there remarking on your work

  • while occasionally pulling on a rubber ducky at your behest.

  • But yeah, the whole idea of this is to go about monster-making with animated awesomeness,

  • accomplished by clicking, dragging, and dropping any of the parts on-screen.

  • You get arms, legs, torsos, eyeballs, fuzzy bits, and even brains to adjust the traits

  • and voice of your monster.

  • Everything attaches to everything else, kinda like the game Spore but a good thirteen years

  • earlier.

  • There are also squeezable color pickles to mix up your creation’s aesthetic, either

  • all at once or part by part.

  • And finally, there’s a piece of Luggage called Rubbage that will delete your monster,

  • and an angry gray blob with a monocle known as the Exit Bug who will take you away from

  • the current room.

  • -”EXIT!”

  • [foyer music plays, monsters sounding off]

  • Speaking of rooms there are six more of them after the Main Lab, all of which are selected

  • through the Foyer.

  • Well start with the Sewer Show hosted by Slippo and Mergatroid.

  • [monsters make music]

  • This is a room dedicated to song and dance, with no real goal except

  • to mess around and have fun.

  • Truthfully that’s the goal of the entire program: screwing around and seeing what happens.

  • In this case it comes down to clicking on the instrument monsters and pressing various

  • keyboard keys to make your own monster join in the cacophony.

  • [monstrous musical cacophony]

  • Next well head to Kelpy’s Undersea World, a watery

  • realm that provides access to all kinds of accessories for your monster.

  • It’s also a good example of A2M2’s randomly-generated dialogue.

  • -”Monster, do you ever tickle a porpoise with electric eel earwax?”

  • -”When pigs fly!”

  • There are a preset number of recordings of course, but for every quote unquoteconversation

  • you have, the outcome will be randomly determined from a library of lines.

  • This ends up feeling like a game of Mad Libs playing itself in front of you, it’s weird

  • stuff but it works.

  • Next well hit up the Personality Parlor, a room with a monstrous pipe organ and an

  • array of cuckoo clocks that alter your monster’s mind.

  • Again it’s just about having fun with what the program has on offer, so if you want an

  • angry monster that’s continually quoting classic English literature or whatever, this

  • is the place to do it.

  • -”Woe unto me!”

  • Up next is Diaper Dan’s Squash Court, the obligatory gross room.

  • This is a mid-1990s kids activity center, after all.

  • Dan is a big baby wearing a metallic diaper wielding a giant magnet that attracts garbage,

  • which he smashes into dustballs using his metal-clad diaper butt.

  • [gratuitous poop noise]

  • Again, mid-90s kids software, just roll with it.

  • The point of this area is to create new monster parts, accomplished by clicking each of the

  • dustball faucets until you get the number of the part you want.

  • Then clicking the zapper will turn the dust into the associated part.

  • Yeah youre constantly getting new pieces to adhere to your monster, so by the end of

  • your experience your creation looks like a Nickelodeon cubist painting.

  • And the final activity is contained within Spaghetti and Meatball’s Kitchen, a cookhouse

  • run by a pile of living noodles and an irritable impaled ball of meat.

  • -”Monster, I heard your mom likes to feed to lobster lice sprinkled with dog dust!”

  • -”Did your mom ever feed you that?”

  • So the idea here is that every letter of the alphabet has a corresponding ingredient in

  • the kitchen, which you can find by either clicking its location or typing on the keyboard.

  • And if you enjoy all kinds of ample alliterative awesomeness then this is where it’s at.

  • -”Snore of a slimy sea slug!”

  • -”Half the hair from a happily howling hyena head out of a hole.”

  • Spelling out words results in recipes, creating further possibilities for monster customization.

  • Not every combination works though, so, sorry: no LGR easter eggs here.

  • Once youve reached a self-directed conclusion to the making of your awesome animated monster,

  • you can bring them over into the Photo Studio.

  • Here your monster’s mug is captured for posterity to be displayed in the Rogues Gallery,

  • in either full color or line drawing form, each suitable for printing.

  • And at this point the only thing left to do is to actually print the thing out and enjoy

  • the uniquely-shaped fruits of your labor on a piece of paper.

  • Neat!

  • And that is Awesome Animated Monster Maker, a delightful creativity and curiosity-driven

  • experience that really is a fun time for people of all ages, exactly like the box art promised.

  • It’s not likely to keep you occupied for more than ten minutes, at least if youre

  • someone in their 30s farting around to make a YouTube video that only loosely ties into Halloween.

  • But if I put myself in the sticky shoes of a seven year old in 1995, this program wouldve

  • been more awesome than a handful of soon-to-be-discontinued PB Crisps.

  • Okay maybe not that awesome but still pretty friggin rad.

  • I was enamored by pretty much any kind of animated CD-ROM activity center at that age

  • and the absurdity of this one wouldve absolutely been my jam, so I’m a tad envious of you

  • LGR viewers that got to play around with this when it was new.

  • Even if it’s not as involved as the later Ultra Edition of the program, which included

  • a bunch of improvements and even some games to play.

  • At the very least though, the original Awesome Animated Monster Maker is something that still

  • brought a smile to my face and a chuckle to my chuckle-maker over two decades later, and

  • for that I am grateful.

  • [continued monster music] -”EXIT!”

  • And if you found yourself grateful for this video, then wow, that’s quite the compliment.

  • In that case hand over all your free time by watching these other videos I’ve made!

  • Or simply peruse at your own leisure, that works too.

  • Either way though, thank you for watching LGR!

Greetings and today weve got a neat little program that I recently got in a box of goodies.

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LGR - Awesome Animated Monster Maker (LGR - Awesome Animated Monster Maker)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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