Humongous entertainment spy fox
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On July 11, 1996, Humongous Entertainment was purchased by GT Interactive for US$76 million. Acquisitions, decline, dissolution (1996–2006)
#Humongous entertainment spy fox plus#
This was followed by two expansion packs in 1998, as well as a variation called Total Annihilation: Kingdoms plus an expansion pack in 1999. In 1995, Gilbert and Day established a company division, Cavedog Entertainment, in Seattle, set to develop games of alternative genres, and released Total Annihilation, a real-time strategy (RTS) game, in 1997. The company became the third largest children's educational-software company.
#Humongous entertainment spy fox series#
Despite all four series being developed and released in parallel, characters from one series do not formally cross over with ones in another and instead appear as cameos or Easter eggs in any of the three other series. It became known for creating four point-and-click adventure game series intended for young children, branded collectively as "Junior Adventures", with the four series being the Putt-Putt series, the Freddi Fish series, the Pajama Sam series and the Spy Fox series. The name Humongous Entertainment was suggested by Gilbert's ex- LucasArts colleague, Tim Schafer. Humongous Entertainment was formed by Shelley Day and Ron Gilbert in 1992, then based in Woodinville, Washington.
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Founded in 1992, the company is best known for developing multiple edutainment franchises, most prominently Putt-Putt, Freddi Fish, Pajama Sam and Spy Fox, which, combined, sold over 15 million copies and earned more than 400 awards of excellence. was an American video game developer based in Bothell, Washington.