Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Acre Wood

Winnie the Pooh In The Hundred Acre Wood

Cover art
Developer(s) Sierra On-Line
Publisher(s) Sierra On-Line
Distributor(s) Walt Disney Personal Computer Software
Platform(s) Amiga, Apple II, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS
Release date(s) 1986
Genre(s) Adventure
Mode(s) Single-player

Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Acre Wood is a single player adventure game created by Al Lowe for Sierra On-Line, released in 1986. It is based on the character Winnie the Pooh.

Plot

The Hundred Acre Wood was populated with characters from A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh series of short stories.

Each character had lost an item of value to them and wanted the item returned. The player moves through the Hundred Acre Wood and collects the missing items then returns them to their rightful owners. Only one item can be carried at a time, so picking up one item means leaving behind of whatever item is currently being carried. Some screens have interactive sub elements. For example: you could "climb" Pooh's tree and see the limb where he kept his honey pots safely out of the reach of flood waters (a reference to a scene in the Disney animated movie "The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh"and Chapter 9 of A.A. Milne's book Winnie-the-Pooh.). The game has no animation in the mode of a traditional Quest game such as King's Quest. Rather, the Hundred Acre Wood existed as a grid of connected static screens. Players move between the screen using the arrow keys and can only move North, South, East or West. The missing items are randomly assigned at the start of each new game to screens within this grid, although the various characters can always be found on the same screens. When an item is "dropped" on a screen in order to "pick up" another item, the dropped item stays on that screen until the user returns to retrieve it later, but not all items belong to anyone.

Reuniting a character with their item results in a celebration screen.

At random points the items can be lost if the player runs into Tigger (who bounces them), or when the wind starts again.

See also


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