Disney's Animated Storybook
Disney's Animated Storybook is a point-and-click adventure interactive storybook video game series based on Walt Disney Feature Animation and Pixar films that were released throughout the 1990s. They were published by Disney Interactive for personal computers for children ages 4 to 8 years old. Starting in 1994, most entries in the series were developed by Media Station. They have the same plots as their respective films, albeit abridged due to the limited medium. The games have hundreds of clickable hotspots that produced animated gags, as well as many mind-challenging interactive games.
Titles
Development
Background and Walt Disney Computer Software (1988–1994)
Video games based on Walt Disney Company properties had been released since Mickey Mouse for Nintendo's Game & Watch in 1981. Disney licensed out its properties and established partnerships with developers and publishers—such as industry leaders Nintendo, Sega, Capcom, Square, and Sierra—Over the next few years, Disney built a routine of releasing tie-in games shortly after the release of films. They soon became more involved in the development process, however; for example, for the Sega Mega Drive version of Aladdin, Disney animators worked alongside the game designers. Additionally, Roy Disney became unhappy with the quality of a third-party Fantasia game he was overseeing, and shut down production. This greater involvement from Disney's feature animation team led to the games being better received by critics and the public. Nevertheless, by 1991, disappointing sales figures coupled with developers squeezing license fees and Disney shutting down low-quality games during development meant the company was in talks to be turned into a joint partnership with outside software houses. In 1993, Disney Chairman Michael Eisner spent publicly "defied interactive hype by portraying the company as low-tech". Disney executives discussed if they should "shift all game development in-house while tripling the amount of people working in the division, or in six weeks cut the whole team", but a final decision was reserved until 1994.
Meanwhile, throughout the 1990s, popular children's stories in print were adapted into digital storybooks that encouraged interactive learning and play in the computer. Broderbund's Living Books series was perhaps the first example of this, or at least popularized the animated storybook format through hits such as 1993's Just Gradma and Me and Arthur's Teacher Trouble which were based on popular children's books from the 1980s by Mercer Mayer and Marc Brown respectively. They combined the authors' illustrations and stories with digital activities and were guided by a narrator—each screen began with a brief animation followed by a narrator describing the action; after the conclusion of each page, the scene became an " interactive mural with hot buttons" the player could click. The Living Books became popular and encouraged other developers to follow suit and copy the formula. Disney Interactive was one of several interactive divisions of film studios sprouting at the time, including Universal Interactive Studios, Turner Interactive, Fox Interactive, Sony Imagesoft, and Imagination Pilots.
Series conception (June 1994)
Disney's 1994 animated film The Lion King won multiple awards and garnered financial success. Its merchandise sold well through the Disney Store and Disney's mail order catalogue, and their product licensees had an upturn in sales. The company began to cross-market the property throughout its Walt Disney Attractions, Buena Vista Television, Buena Vista Home Video, Walt Disney Records, and Disney Theatrical Productions divisions. Disney wanted to "add to the Lion King synergy of book, products, video, theme park units and recording sales" by having an animated storybook available by the 1994 Christmas shopping season. A new product line was announced on June 24, 1994, while The Lion King was in private screenings. The announcement included Disney Software's first two CD-ROM based computer games: The Lion King Animated Storybook and Aladdin Activity Center, the latter of which would focus on games and learning activities rather than story. Additionally, a series of screensaver programs featuring scenes from Disney films were to be published. Disney chose Media Station as its third-party developer for the game; Media Station had 30 employees, led by David Gregory. Due to the announcement, Media Station thus had only five months of development time. The Lion King Animated Storybook more closely followed the narrative and art style of the film it was based on than Aladdin Activity Center, released November 1994, did to Aladdin. For The Lion King Animated Storybook, the written text of the game is excerpted from Disney Publishing Group's The Lion King storybook, which reproduces the film's narrative in a truncated version. Disney spent over $3 million on promotion for the animated storybook game. Disney released the first version of The Lion King Animated Storybook on November 18, 1994, and its success prompted the company to turn WDCS into a full game developer, renamed Disney Interactive, with a line of animated storybooks to follow entitled Disney's Animated Storybook. The Lion King Animated Storybook would later be accompanied by a CD-ROM, The Lion King Activity Center, in 1995, which started a trend that continued throughout the series. Pixar developed both Toy Story Animated Storybook and Toy Story Activity Center simultaneously in 1996, while the Winnie the Pooh in the Honey Tree Animated Storybook would be met with a companion, Winnie the Pooh Activity Center, in 2000. The Lion King Animated Storybook became Disney Interactive's second release on the Macintosh after the Aladdin Activity Center.Media Station employee Newton Lee became one of the lead software and title engineers for The Lion King Animated Storybook. As he recalled in the book Disney Stories: Getting to Digital, "Media Station used a number of 'proprietary strategic software technologies' that made it easier for the developer to create large animation multimedia and the user to play it back, impossible until that time". A playback engine was created to provide high quality playback from a CD-ROM of large animations. WinToon, which Media Station previously developed for Microsoft, aided the projects by "reduc the amount of data actually required for larger animation playback". The software improved performance of playback in Windows by reducing the amount of data that was required", arguing that it was necessary because "unlike other interactive storybook developers who used a palette of 256 colors throughout the entire title, Media Station used 256 colors per screen; this resulted in very large animation files". In 1994, Lee created an object-oriented scripting language similar to Macromedia's ActionScript that allowed developers to create interactivity for animation quickly and easily, and a cross-platform multimedia compiler to allow the software to run on both Mac and Windows. Media Station also used a cross-platform language, Interactive Media File Script, Title Compiler, and Asset Management Systems, among others. These new tools enabled production for a Disney's Animated Storybook game to be between three and six months.
Release of ''The Lion King'' storybook (November 1994)
The Lion King Animated Storybook was originally released for Windows in December 1994, with a Mac version following in early 1995. The release of the computer game was affected by bad publicity. Hundreds of customers found that the game ran poorly, if at all, on their computers; dozens of messages appeared in Disney's public bulletin board on America Online. Families became especially disgruntled because Disney's technical support team were unavailable. On the morning of Christmas Day, Disney's customer service was flooded with calls from angry parents with crying children. They complained that when they tried to load the game on their new Compaq Presario computers, they were faced with the blue screen of death. Eight employees were added to the Disney's phone-answering staff on December 26, 1994 to take questions from purchasers. For weeks they were flooded with complaints about the title, as was Disney's CompuServe address. The company was accused of "killing Christmas" for thousands of children that year.Disney was mostly silent, but sometimes sent private replies to individual addresses. When the company made a statement, it accused Media Station of saying they had finished developing the product before it was fine tuned They also blamed customers for having inadequate computers for running the product and not reading the box carefully enough before buying. The Lion King Animated Storybook minimum requirements include a 486SX MHz, MS-DOS 6.0, Windows 3.1, 4MB of RAM, 10MB of free disk space, a Windows-compatible mouse, a 256-colour SVGA, and an 8 or 16-bit sound and 2xCD ROM drive, all of which were top of the range at the time. The game also relied on Window's new WinG graphics engine and could only work with select video drivers. In late 1994, Compaq released a Presario PC whose video drivers had not been tested with WinG, and due to the rush to market before Christmas 1994, the Animated Storybook was not tested for the computer. Lee asserted that ultimate blame lay with the rush to market and lack of compatibility testing. Steve Fields, senior vice president of multimedia for Disney Interactive, placed culpability on Disney for "timing the sales of the product so close to Christmas", and attributed its problems to the "high number of sales, more than half of which...made by new computer users who tried to learn how to use computers on Christmas Day with the Lion King animated story book". He promised future games would be ready before Christmas and not rushed out. Fields said the problem was everywhere but Disney got a disproportionate amount of blame due to the high number of units sold. Phil Corman, vice president of the Interactive Multimedia Association, who in the aftermath created the Parallax Project to develop uniform package labeling and guidelines for developers, noted "We're not singling out Disney by any means, but that was just the watershed event." In The Wall Street Journal article "A jungle out there", Rose and Turner argued that "Disney had had final responsibility for quality control of the animated story book" and that they "apparently did not exercise the responsibility". David Gregory of Media Station asserted that 90 per cent of the complaint cases were due to the video driver used. Media Station resolved the video driver card issue within days, and made a second version available for purchase and as a free exchange for the earlier one. The company eventually recalled defective programs, and "many users have supposedly been provided a video driver upgrade by Disney". In a June 1995 press release, the company noted they were providing "technical support, full refunds or product exchanges if the customer is not completely satisfied". By May 1995, families could call Disney Interactive customer support and request a free version 1.1 CD, which incorporated support for 8-bit sound boards. In 1995, a third version of the software, compatible with both Windows and MS-DOS, was released. The Lion King debacle led Microsoft to develop the more stable and powerful graphics engine DirectX in September 1995.
Despite the game being highly promoted and successful, negative news stories appeared on TV. The game likely worked on the systems the Disney programmers used to test the game, but not on the systems used by the general public; this was used as a case study in relation to programmers having "target environment and intended end user" in mind. Lecturer Audrey Ricker felt this would "force businesses to be more publicly responsive to consumers". Entertainment Weekly deemed it a "humiliating fiasco" where " thousands of frustrated parents swamping tech-support lines with woeful tales of non-functioning sound cards and video freeze-ups". Ricker asserted the event demonstrated that a piece of software must be thoroughly tested on all supported platforms and system configurations before its release, regardless of what the marketing department has scheduled or what major holidays are coming up. 7th Level contacted Disney about developing a game for Christmas 1995 featuring Timon and Pumbaa in response to the misstep. George D. Grayson, 7th Level's president and chief executive, commented "the computer nerd takes particular pleasure in making something work that doesn't work right". This game would become Gamebreak! Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games, Disney Interactive's first entry into their entertainment-focused Disney Interactive Entertainment division.
The Lion King Animated Storybook was also available in Spanish, French, German and Italian-language through a special mail-in offer on the English-language product. In November 1995, six local language versions were released in Europe. In February 1996, following the success of the first three titles in the series, Disney Interactive planned to develop 23 new foreign-language versions of the games. In June 1996, Disney announced a Japanese version of The Lion King Animated Storybook to tap into the country's growing PC home market. Michael Jardine, representative director of Disney Interactive Japan, said that while there were no sales targets, the company would be happy to sell a copy for each of the country's 7.5 million computers. Libro Animado Interactivo: Winnie Puh was released in April 1997, and from July 20 onwards a bilingual version of the game was available on the Disney website. Disney Interactive Japan released 101 Dalmatians Animated Storybook in June 1997, with The Hunchback of Notre Dame Animated Storybook set to follow in late 1997 or early 1998. A Spanish version of Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too Animated Storybook was released in mid-1999. In July 2001, Disney Interactive officially announced they would be launching Spanish-language versions of many of its titles in the U.S. and Puerto Rico in an effort to penetrate the Hispanic market; the games would begin sale that November in traditional retail, Hispanic shops, and through Hispanic exclusive distributors. Called Libro Animado Interactivo, these included El Rey Leon, Pocahontas, Winnie Puh y el Arbol De La Miel, 101 Dalmatas, Hercules, and La Sirenita. This was the first time Disney made Spanish-language versions of its edutainment titles, following in the suit of its history of dubbing films into Spanish and other languages, and one of the first times any computer software company had made a concerted effort to target the U.S. Hispanic population. Disney Interactive president Jan Smith expressed joy with Disney Interactive offering "Hispanic parents and kids the chance to experience interactive entertainment within the context of their own culture." Disney Interactive collaborated with Latin Links. the exclusive sales representative of the company's Spanish-language products within the U.S. and Puerto Rico. A German version of Mulan Animated Storybook was released in 1998. Isabel Valdés, head of multicultural marketing firm Santiago Valdés Consulting noted: "This initiative bridges a gap between Hispanic parents and children, who can preserve their native language while experiencing the entertainment value of Disney in a whole new way."
Disney Interactive founding (December 1994)
As a result of The Lion King Animated Storybook and Aladdin Activity Center being successful, Disney Interactive was founded December 5, 1994 by merging WDCS with the Walt Disney Television and Telecommunications division, to develop and market a range of interactive entertainment based on their properties. WDTT chairman Richard Frank expected Disney Interactive to become a $1 billion business within five years, with 20 interactive games and educational titles in 1995, another 40 titles in 1996, and up to 60 in 1997; development for these was to range from more than $100,000 to $1 million. The new Disney Interactive division was devoted to developing, publishing and licensing software for children's entertainment and educational markets. As such, Disney Interactive started with two sub-divisions—Disney Interactive Entertainment and Disney Interactive Edutainment. Disney Interactive Edutainment was Disney Interactive's main product line, under which the Disney's Animated Storybook series fell. All development moved in-house, and the division grew to between eighty and one-hundred and twenty employees from the eight or so the division had just three years prior. This new unit came with Steve McBeth as a new president, an increased staff, more interaction with other divisions of the company and a greater financial commitment from Disney. Its first projects were Pocahontas Animated Storybook and a software title based on Disney's Gargoyles TV show. With this new division, Disney executives were supportive of creative risks, and the studio was in general left to its own devices rather than under "constant or undue scrutiny". McBeth was committed to "producers and directors of animated features will be involved in creative development process for CD-ROMs and video games". He noted that "Disney realizes that production is becoming an increasingly multifaceted process" and that "when creating an animated film or home video, the company also must have plans to spin off a variety of software products". The new division moved from solely licensing Disney properties or publishing titles to instead handling game development and publishing itself. Though outside contractors such as Media Station were still used after the restructure, Rose and Turner asserted in the Washington Post that "they will probably be dropped if the Disney Interactive division becomes the full-service software unit that Disney seemingly intends". While Media Station and other companies did continue to help develop the Disney edutainment products, including the Disney's Animated Storybook line, they were unable to depend on a long-term relationship with Disney Interactive as it was now "subject to the whim of Disney".Disney Interactive planned for the new series of educational video games to feature popular characters and allow players to follow the stories while learning; it named the franchise Disney's Animated Storybook, subtitled as "A Story Waiting For You To Make It Happen". Marc Teren, vice president of Disney Interactive's entertainment division, hoped to create games with a "true and fair representation of the original property", while aiming to capitalise on "ancillary products to successful theatrical and home video releases". Children's Business suggested the series came into fruition because in the contemporary entertainment market, it was "customary now for entertainment companies to release CD-ROMs to support a film or TV show". According to writer Rena B. Lewis, the games were "designed for use at home, not school". These animated books were considered a type of entertainment program, one of the three types released by Disney Interactive in addition to their simulation games and discovery programs. While they were advertised as teaching tools because they give no reward to players for doing this like they do for clicking hotspots, "the teaching of reading could be considered secondary in these programs". However, as a piece of edutainment, these games "could be said to teach the process of and rehearse reflexes needed for playing videogames".
The film stories were edited to ensure continuity of the original narrative while offering interaction. To add to the aural experience, the games featured voice acting. They allowed children to choose what they wanted to do onscreen, between reading, playing, and interacting with hotspots. The original film scripts were considered from an activity standpoint, with clickable features added to each page so players could affect the story; for example, in The Lion King Animated Storybook players could turn Pride Rock from green to brown, or collect bugs for Timon to eat. These techniques increased engagement with each screen's events, and helped create connections between player and characters.
Media Station era (1994–1996)
The Lion King was the first film to be given an "interactive story life" and Disney's first venture into the storybook realm. Media Station, a company that produced and designed interactive CD-ROM entertainment, was the main developer of the series. While Disney Interactive planned to bring software development in-house to the studio, the business model for the Disney's Animated Storybook series saw Disney Interactive outsource the development work to Media Station, while handling the animation and design themselves at their Burbank head office. This left Disney in charge of the design, development, and marketing of the series, with Media Station and other companies acting as programming contractors without creative decision making. The series' distribution was handled by Disney's Buena Vista Pictures Distribution division. The developers aimed to have a "true and fair representation of the original property", having the films' directors and producers working alongside their artists and designers. The series was "designed to bring the theatrical experience home". Disney and Media Station co-designed the titles as a joint venture. Speaking about their work with other studios, Media Station founder David Gregory said "Working with Disney has given us the chance to work with the greatest content possible, and the challenge of living up to their standards. It's gotten our name in the channels". Gregory wrote the score for The Lion King Animated Storybook. Media Station handled development for much of the series, as Disney Interactive did not yet have the technical resources to handle it themselves. In May 1996, however, Disney Interactive acquired Sanctuary Studios, which would continue to operate as an independent developer of educational content under Disney. Sanctuary's 35 staff in their local Victoria, British Columbia office became a small part of Disney Interactive's 300 employees, handling the programming, sound and graphic design, and art instead of Media Station. Some background art and animation was outsourced to Creative Capers Entertainment for these titles as well.Marc Teren oversaw development of the entire series, and directed Disney's early production of animated storybooks and activity center software. Beginning with The Lion King Animated Storybook, instead of reusing artwork from the film and forcing it into the new format, Teren's team "worked hand in hand with the group in feature animation", while the film's directors and producers worked with the games' designers and artists. Disney and Media Station collaborated to create more than 12,000 frames of digital animation for each game. For The Lion King Animated Storybook, Media Station contributed 7,000 new frames of animation while Disney animators contributed 5,000. Media Station also created over 300 music and vocal assets, using traditional orchestration and arrangement and digital composition tools. Digital music and sound effects were composed, recorded, and edited at Media Station. Media Station's Newton Lee, Henry Flurry, and Harold Cicada Brokaw were the lead team behind the first five titles in the series. The programming team for Hercules Animated Storybook was led by Matthew Manuel.
One of the advantages of creating software while the films were in production was that it allowed the original voice cast to be part of the projects. To that end, the voice cast sometimes consisted of actors from the films reprising their roles; for instance, Toy Story Animated Storybook featured Don Rickles as Mr. Potato Head, Annie Potts as Bo Peep and Jim Varney as Slinky Dog. Kevin Kline, Demi Moore, Jason Alexander and Tom Hulce also reprised their roles in The Hunchback of Notre Dame Animated Storybook. For Pocahontas Animated Storybook, the developers secured basketball star Chris Webber alongside Pocahontas's voice actress Irene Bedard. In The Little Mermaid, Jodi Benson and Samuel E. Wright reprise their roles as Ariel and Sebastian, respectively. Meanwhile, at other times different voice actors who sounded like the originals were used, such as Tom Hanks' brother Jim Hanks voicing Woody in the Toy Story game. The Lion King Animated Storybook is narrated by The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air actor James Avery, while Toy Story Animated Storybook is narrated by Cheers actor John Ratzenberger, who plays Hamm in the film. Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook marks the first time Brad Garrett had voiced Eeyore, a role he would later reprise in the live-action film Christopher Robin, and the animated film Ralph Breaks the Internet.
The games were generally created on tight budgets and schedules. Disney found that "planning or making software while movies are filmed helps the product stay true to the film, and makes it cheaper to produce". Disney Interactive planned to develop the software alongside the film creatives, and have it released simultaneously as the films' release. These enabled The Lion King
From December 1994 to February 1995, Disney Interactive hired 50 new employees. It felt the initial success of the Activity and Storybook games would boost the success of their Disney's Learning Series and the first game from their creativity line Disney's Draw & Paint. Due to the success of The Lion King Animated Storybook, Media Station received contracts from other companies such as Disney, Hasbro, Mattel, Scholastic, Crayola, IBM, and HarperCollins. The success of the first Activity Center and Animated Storybook titles resulted in other developers attempting to mimic Disney with their own digital storybooks, such as Sound Source Interactive's and Viacom New Media's The Indian in the Cupboard, both released in 1995. Seeing Disney blame The Lion King debacle on Media Station was "painful" for David Gregory and his team. The second title in the series was Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook, which was aimed at a younger audience than The Lion King Animated Storybook had been. It aimed to use a popular character to introduce young players to the interactive medium through a linear story with interactive elements, following in the footsteps of the first rudimentary interactive children's story, Amanda Goodenough's Inigo Gets Out for the HyperCard, released eight years prior. During development of Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook, Media Station suffered low employee morale and several key engineers threatened to quit. With Newton Lee uplifting employee morale, the team were able to finish the project on schedule. By 1996, the Disney Interactive's education division had 125 staff, and was "spending enormous amounts of money to make sure there is a unique experience." The Animated Storybooks for Pocahontas, Hunchback and Hercules gave "special thanks" or "in associated with" credits to Animation Services at Walt Disney Feature Animation. In 1996, Ricker asserted "By taking control of its interactive business and competing with Broderbund and other giants in the field, Disney will most likely strengthen its position as one of the five major studios".
Pixar's Interactive Products Group (1996)
Development of Toy Story Animated Storybook was handled by the film's production company, Pixar, rather than an outsourced developer. While the majority of the storybooks feature a traditional animation style, Toy Story uses CGI graphics to simulate the film's visuals. 80 percent of the artwork Pixar created for the game was new.The Interactive Products Group, a Pixar subsidiary, was founded in 1996. Its staff included 95 of Pixar's 300 and was headed by Vice President Interactive Products Pam Kerwin. It was founded to create computer games and it had its own animators, art department, and engineers. They were tasked with creating two products amid intense time constraints: Toy Story Animated Storybook: and Toy Story Activity Center, to coincide with the VHS release of the Toy Story film. As vice president of the Interactive Products Group from 1996 to 1998, Pam Kerwin spearheaded development of interactive edutainment products based on Pixar's feature film properties. She adapted the feature production process to the production of interactive products. The division produced the two products within 16 months. Disney's Animated Storybook: Toy Story was touted as "the first CD-ROM to deliver full screen, motion-picture-quality animation on home computers". Between the two products, the group had created as much original animation as there was in the Toy Story film itself.
Children's interactive product writer/designer Carolyn Handler Miller wrote the script and text for the game. As the team were unable to get Tom Hanks to narrate, Miller was forced to tell the story from the point of view of another character, settling on the "highly entertaining, sardonic" character Hamm. Hanks was replaced by his brother Jim, while Pat Fraley replaced Tim Allen as Buzz. Miller had to rewrite the story from his perspective—a significant change from the film—creating a writing challenge. The team also struggled with ways to "incorporate meaningful interaction" that would also be in the best interests of the game's quality. For instance, in the film some characters are seen playing checkers, so members of the team wanted to add the game as a minigame. It was eventually decided that the minigame did not advance the narrative or involve the story's characters, instead "stopping everything dead". Instead, Miller designed a minigame in which players raced against the clock before Andy and his guests came into the room and made the "alarming discovery" that toys come to life when humans are not around. According to Miller, this minigame gave the players a sense of urgency and agency. According to The Guardian, the game was published by Avanquest, a French software house known for releasing antivirus software, although Wired wrote it was released via Disney Interactive. The Seattle Times noted that for Toy Story Animated Storybook, "Faced with home computers' modest processing power, Disney's programmers had to limit the number of objects moving onscreen".
While Steve Jobs was convinced the games would sell 10 million copies, on par with the sales figures of bestselling direct-to-video releases, Kerwin thought the games would not be as financially successful as the film because the gaming market had not reached that scale and the audience for tie-ins was limited. Together Storybook and Activity sold one million copies and contributed to Pixar having $150 million in the bank by the second quarter 1996. CEO Lawrence Levy and entertainment analyst Harold Vogel described the games as successful. However, the storybook failed to meet Pixar's expectations, and "overall market for CD-ROM based interactive entertainment has not matured as many had hoped and predicted". At the time, Pixar wanted to continue work on the then made-for-home video Toy Story 2, but the entire studio only had 300 people: around 200 working on A Bug's Life and 62 developing games at the Interactive Products Group. Disney became unhappy with the slow progress of Toy Story 2, which was still in the development stage. Pixar needed artists to work on the films, so began to borrow them from the in-house division Interactive Products Group, thinking "Why are we doing this? Let's just make the movies. That's where our passion is". When Jobs was informed that the games would not meet sales expectations, he decided to shut down the computer games operation and redirect the divisions valuable talent and resources to Pixar's main film making division; the staff became the initial core of the Toy Story 2, which about to enter into production after a year of gestation, while leaving any future CD-ROM efforts to Disney Interactive due to their marketing and merchandising prowess. The dissolution of the division was preempted by the closure of Pixar's television-commercial unit in July 1996, so the team could focus solely on films.
Jobs said that while Pixar staff enjoyed creating the titles, the studio chose to focus talent on films produced under its partnership with Disney, as that was "where our greatest opportunities lie". Ultimately, the "uncertain future of this market, combined with Pixar's enhanced opportunities to create longer format film and made for home video products under its new partnership with Disney, triggered Pixar's decision to redirect its valuable talent". The computer games operation dissolved on March 31, 1997 and no further games were made, while Kerwin was assigned to start a shortfilm group. Their first project, Geri's Game, was released alongside A Bug's Life and started a trend of shorts being paired with films. Robertson Stephens analyst Keith Benjamin felt it " no sense for Pixar to waste their scarce talent on CD-ROMs now that they have a better deal with Disney. They're going to concentrate on films because that's where the real money is". Pixar co-founder, Ed Catmull, told Variety in 1999 "we did the very best and only did fine financially" on the games, noting that the company spent as much on them as they did on films. When asked in 2012 if Pixar would return to the gaming industry, Brave director Mark Andrews firmly said "no" based on his experience at the Interactive Products Group, while the film's producer Katherine Sarafian said "I don't think we would consider it now because we want to focus on the primary business of filmmaking".
Creative Capers era (1996–1999)
In 1996, Media Station production ceased, and lead software engineer Newton Lee joined Disney Online, where he designed games for Disney's online subscription product. Their last product to be released was 1997's Hercules. Throughout 1997, Living Books' sales dropped while costs increased, facing growing competition from Disney Interactive and Microsoft in the animated storybook genre; as a result, their staff was laid off and the group was folded into Broderbund. Disney also faced financial challenges, with titles that would have cost $1 or 2 million now reaching $5–8 million. Amidst other financial challenges, the company found that the success of games such as the Toy Story storybook lacked the flow-on in products such as 7th Level's The Hunchback of Notre Dame Topsy Turvy Games. Teren left the company, 25 per cent of its staff was laid off, and the studio moved back to a licensing model within the Consumer Products division. At the time, while all console products were licensed, Disney mostly self-published PC titles, and educational games were still developed in-house. Disney Interactive refocused on its core business of providing interactive CD-ROMs for 3- to 12-year-old children and concentrated on leveraging film properties into multimedia products. After Media Station's departure, the later titles in the Animated Storybook series were developed by Creative Capers Entertainment, with entered into an exclusive development deal with Disney in 1996. They had previously provided animation work to Media Station's 101 Dalmatians Animated Storybook and offered animation, design, and art services for such Disney Interactive game titles as Gamebreak! Timon & Pumbaa's Jungle Games, Gargoyles, and Mickey Mania; this multi-year deal meant that Disney Interactive also had the rights to any new Creative Capers projects. As a result, Creative Capers, which had also done work for films such as , The Pagemaster and Thumbelina, was in charge of Disney Interactive's animation production and product development.By 1997, Disney was a formidable player within the children's edutainment space. Throughout the first five months of 1997, Disney held 12 per cent of the retail educational software market while the rival Learning Company held 18 per cent; The Wall Street Journal asserted the success of Disney's games such as the 101 Dalmatians storybook had put financial pressure on its rival.
Creative Capers had provided background art and animation for earlier entries, and took over development for later titles. Coming from a film background, the company had to adjust their animation style for the projects as animations in the storybooks were displayed at around 10 frames per second, much lower than feature films. Creative Capers president Sue Shakespeare noted that "in games and Animated Storybooks, there's a purpose for every scene and you have to communicate that quickly using half or even a tenth the number of the frames. In Disney's Animated Storybook, the purpose is to deliver the look and feel and the story of the movie with just a tiny percentage of the animation you would have in a film." Shakespeare enforced a rule requiring employees to avoid animating more than a third of the screen at once to prevent the game engine from overextending and causing jerky movement. She also noted the games would be played on computers of varying qualities, and that they had to acknowledge these restrictions when designing. Their goal was to create feature animation quality, but "at the CD-ROM level". Denver Post noted that as the games were conceived from inside Disney, "developers seem to have unparalleled access to film content while the game moves through development".
In November 1997, Disney Interactive released Ariel's Story Studio, the first in a “Story Studio” product line, where players could follow along with The Little Mermaid
Toward the late 1990s other companies began to follow Disney's storybook series strategy; Sound Source Interactive's An American Tail Animated Moviebook was timed for the rerelease of Universal Studios Home Video's first two Tail films and its new direct-to-video '. In 1998, Disney signed a deal with Apple which meant Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree would be sold for the iMac. On November 3, 1999, Business Wire revealed that Mulan was the first title to be released as the result of then-recent license agreements between Disney and NewKidCo International. In September 1999, Disney Interactive announced it was launching the three brand names "Disney's Early Learning," "Disney's Creativity" and "Disney's Games" and repricing 14 titles including Disney's Animated Storybook Mulan from $29.99 to $19.99. In the multiyear multimillion-dollar deal, NewKidCo. was contracted to develop a series of games for the Sony PlayStation, Nintendo N64 and Game Boy Color platforms, with the first to be a port of Mulan Animated Storybook, to be released some time in 2000 but brought forward to November 1999. In late December 1999 the game was released for GBC and was dual-compatible with Game Boy. Every Animated Storybook title was released on CD in plastic jewel cases enclosed in cardboard boxes with the instructions. In 2001, a compilation of three CDs titled Disney's Classic Animated StoryBook Collection was released consisting of Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too, 101 Dalmatians and Toy Story. A second volume was also released in 2001, featuring Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too, The Lion King, Ariel, and Mulan. Graham Hopper, who became executive vice president/general manager of Disney Interactive Studios in 2002, closed down the last of Disney's PC studios that year, explaining "It wasn't obvious that we could make money, given the continually lower and lower prices of children's PC titles". Animated storybooks continued to be popular until the World Wide Web evolved enough to allow different story experiences to take place on the new interactive medium. In 2011, Disney returned to the animated storybook genre when Disney Publishing Worldwide released a series of apps for Android, the first one being entitled Winnie the Pooh: What's a Bear to Do.
Design
Gameplay
Players are encouraged to engage with the titles via interactive story-telling, discovery, and skill-building activities intended to provide fun yet educational experiences. The games are within the adventure gaming genre and as such use a point-and-click interface. There are a series of icons that the mouse turns into when it runs over hotspots, depending on how one can interact with them. This can include interactions like a minigame, song or animation. The method of going from page to page is often creative and unique to the storybook; for example, in Disney's Animated Storybook: 101 Dalmatians, there are a series of inked feet leading to the exit. The games offer abridged retellings of their respective films, with various plot elements of the film changed. Containing in-game narration, the games allow players to read and play along with the story, or just have the narrator read the story to them. When playing along with the story, players can click on various hotspots to trigger animations or sound effects. Additionally, some "pages" of the story feature optional minigames.Often, some of the voice cast from the films reprised their roles for the games. In the case of 101 Dalmatians, to appeal to 1990s kids, some technology of the original film's time were updated and new technology were added, including computers, video game consoles, larger screen television sets, and passcode-enabled security gates, e.g. Roger's occupation changed from songwriter to video game designer. This game also features a soundtrack of karaoke sing-along songs, which includes five new songs and a new recording of the original film's famous song "Cruella De Vil". Ariel's Story Studio also has a "Create Your Own Storybook" feature that allows players to devise their own storybooks, both words and pictures, and then print out the finished product. Mulan contains more gameplay than other titles within the series; players look for scrolls across locations such as Mulan's house, the army camp, Tung Shao Pass, and the Imperial City. After the player finds all five scrolls and gives them to the emperor, they are made an official Imperial Storymaker, and are then given the ability to create original scrolls; their own animated storybooks using the software. The roleplay within minigames allows players to interact with scenes from the films. In a first for the series, in Hercules the story is narrated in rhyming text, and also allowed players to sing along to karaoke versions of songs from the film. "Pick-a-Page" allows children to review their favorite part of the story and find out more information by clicking on different parts of the screen. "How to Play" gives players more instruction on each screen should they need it. Clicking on an obect creates a short site-specific animation which, unlike traditional adventure games, is superfluous and doesn't affect the storyline. The games provide players with art, poetry, and literature to teach sequencing, vocabulary skills, creative writing and auditory discrimination, to sing along with Disney tunes, practice memorization, learn music appreciation, focus on literacy skills such as vocabulary and reading comprehension, and create artwork on desktop publishing software; additionally the series is "designed to enhance supplemental learning in the classroom, and to give young children practice with early childhood motor skills and language arts". Often the minigames came with different difficulty levels.
Plot
All the games' plots are abridged retellings of the animated films they are based on, with some plot elements changed or removed from their original counterparts.Disney's Animated Storybook: The Lion King is based on the 1994 Walt Disney Feature Animation film, The Lion King, which tells the story of how a lion named Simba rose to become king of the Pride Lands, claiming the role from his evil uncle Scar, who manipulated Simba into thinking that he killed his father Mufasa.
Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree is based on the 1966 short film of the same name, and the game was the first of two Animated Storybook titles based on films included in 1977's The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.
Pocahontas is based on the 1995 Walt Disney Animation Studios film of the same name, which told a fictionalised account of the relationship between Native American Pocahontas and Englishman John Smith in the midst of the European colonization of the Americas. Like in the film, the animated storybook video game sees the player follow Pocahontas and her friends Flit the hummingbird and Meeko the raccoon aim to prevent a war between British settlers and her Native American people. The game is narrated by Grandmother Willow, and features four activities in total.
Toy Story is based on Pixar's 1995 film, Toy Story, which was the first feature-length computer-animated film. Developed by a computer game development subsidiary of Pixar that existed at the time, it is the only Animated Storybook title to be based on a Pixar film.
The Hunchback of Notre Dame is based on the 1996 Walt Disney Animation Studios film of the same name, featuring the adventure of reclusive and disfigured Quasimodo and his escape from the evil Claude Frollo, and is part of the product line within Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame franchise. The game follows the plot of the 1996 Disney film The Hunchback of Notre Dame closely, and features six separate activities that can be played throughout the story, which is narrated by the fictional entertainer Clopin Trouillefou. The game contains the characters featured in Victor Hugo's original novel such as Quasimodo, Esmeralda and Phoebus, as well as characters created specifically for the Disney film such as the gargoyles Hugo, Victor and Laverne.
101 Dalmatians is based on the 1961 film of the same name and its 1996 live-action remake. Like the two films, the plot of the game sees the villainous fashionista Cruella de Vil steal a series of dalmatian puppies from married couple Roger and Anita and their pets Pongo and Perdita, who then attempt to rescue them back. The game is the only non-Winnie the Pooh-based Animated Storybook title based on a Walt Disney Animation Studios film that was made before the Disney Renaissance.
Hercules is based on the 1997 Walt Disney Animation Studios film of the same name, which itself is based on the mythical Greek hero Heracles and his defeat of the god of the underworld Hades.
Ariel's Story Studio was released as a tie-in to the 1997 re-release of the 1989 Disney film The Little Mermaid, which the game is based on. Despite sharing the same style of gameplay and the same primary developer in Media Station, this game has never been released under the Disney's Animated Storybook name, although it is generally considered to be the eighth entry in that series. The game is sometimes known as Disney's Animated Storybook: The Little Mermaid as a result.
Mulan is based on the 1998 Walt Disney Animation Studios film Mulan, was developed by Media Station and published by Disney Interactive. A PlayStation port entitled Disney's Story Studio: Mulan was developed by Revolution Software (under the name "Kids Revolution, and published by NewKidCo on December 20, 1999. This game was targeted toward a young female demographic ages four to nine.
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too is based on the 1974 short film of the same name. According to The Washington Times, the game is a loose adaption of The House at Pooh Corner chapters, "In Which Tigger Is Unbounced" and "In Which It Is Shown That Tiggers Don't Climb Trees".
Release
Promotion
Debra Streicker-Fine, head of the marketing department for Disney Software, worked on the launch of the titles. The games had a variety of distribution methods, including being made available through retail outlets, mass merchants, software and specialty stores, and mail order catalogues. In the first year of the series' history, advertising creative for Disney Interactive's Edutainment unit was completed by Kresser Stein Robaire in Santa Monica, but on September 26, 1995 the contract was awarded to Foote, Cone & Belding in San Francisco; their first assignment was the campaign for Pocahontas Animated Storybook. Meanwhile, the media portion of the account remained at Western International Media in Los Angeles.While Disney was new to the software industry, the company was used to putting large promotional campaigns behind its products. The marketing push behind The Lion King Animated Storybook included being "advertising in computer magazines and on television, sweatshirt and plush toy giveaways at select retailers, a sweepstakes offering a trip to Walt Disney World and a free "Lion King" mouse pad in every package". Joseph E. Adney III, marketing manager at Walt Disney Computer Software, noted that in their strategy "in-store, we looked for ways to support the retailers, make things more fun and add more value to the experience we are talking about". Disney Interactive presented information on their upcoming titles at the Winter Consumer Electronic Trade Show beginning Jan. 6, 1995, in Las Vegas. Disney often showcased their storybook titles at E3, for instance The Hunchback of Notre Dame in 1996 and Mulan in 1998. The Lion King Animated Storybook was included in the Sound Blaster Disney bundle, along with The Lion King Print Studio and The Lion King Screen Scenes. Through a partnership with Disney Interactive, the CanBeJam series of PC were exclusively bundled with CD-ROM titles as Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook for the Japanese market. In June 1996 it was announced that Apple Mcintosh Performa computers models came with the Apple Magic Collection, which bundled The Lion King animated storybook alongside Aladdin Activity Center and a sneak peek of the film Toy Story. The Mirror held a Dalmatian Competition in 1997, in which they would give away 10 free copies of 101 Dalmatians Animated Storybook to the winners. Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook was demonstrated at the 1995 Consumer Electronics Show in Meeting Room No. M-6314, South 6 Annex. The game's release was part of a year-long, company-wide celebration of Disney's Winnie the Pooh franchise, which included cross-promotion with Disney Interactive, Disney Licensing, Buena Vista Home Video, Walt Disney Records and Disney Press. Purchases of video games resulted in a free copy of Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook. The game was part of a "comprehensive advertising campaign in trade and consumer publications targeting family and home PC audiences". Sunday Mirror and Nestle offered tickets for a free demo CD of the game; customers had to collect two tickets and pick up the CD from Tesco branches. A playable demo of Hercules was featured in the 1997 Electronic Entertainment Expo. In 1998, a game in the series was included in an iMac software bundle. In 1998, Mega offered five free copies of Mulan Animated Storybook and Mulan's Print Studio each in a promotion. Winnie-the-Pooh & Tigger Too Animated Storybook was released in retail stores on February 23, 1999, the same day as Sing a Song With Pooh Bear. In 1999, a copy of any game in Disney's Learning Series: Winnie the Pooh came with a free copy of Disney's Animated Storybook: Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree. The A List conducted a promotion through The Mirror where they would give away 10 copies of the program. In 2001, various entries within the series were repackaged with Ariel's Story Studio in Disney's Classic Animated Storybook Collection: Volumes 1 and 2. On March 1, 2002, Disney dropped the price of Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too Animated Storybook to just 9.99 pounds. In October 2004, Disney released Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree Animated Storybook onto Steam.
Promotion of ''Toy Story''
Disney created a "multimillion-dollar marketing blitz" to promote Toy Story Animated Storybook, which included the "unchartered approach" of airing two 30-second TV spots television advertisement spots in 25 major markets. Pixar created new animation specifically for the commercial. While software company executives at the time didn't see television ads to be commercially viable, for the Animated Storybook series, Disney proceeded as it had strong ties with mass retailers like Walmart and Target and mainstream family appeal. The title's launch was supported with "TV, print and direct ads and, on the Web, through a tie-in with Dial for Kids soap" For the launch of Toy Story Animated Storybook, Disney Interactive offering a factory rebate and a website for its Hunt for the Lost Toy crossword puzzle contest. For a limited time, entrants into the contest could win 10,000 free copies of the new title, as well as register for a grand-prize drawing for a free trip to Walt Disney World in Florida. In retail stores, Disney setup "elaborate POP displays featuring flashing lights and, in some cases, recorded Woody and Buzz voices activated by a motion sensor". A 30-second trailer for the game was played in 15 million copies of the home video release of "The Aristocats", and Disney considered playing them in the Toy Story VHS too. Full-page print ads in computer-specialty, family and general-interest publications began in mid-July, with customers able to purchase a Toy Story backpack for $4.95. Features on the Toy Story Animated Storybook web site included "printout mazes coloring pages, connect-the-dots pages a product preview, screen shots and a printable form for a $5 rebate with the purchase of the Toy Story CD-ROM and two Dial For Kids bath products". From May to June the website received more than 15 million hits, making it one of the top 10 sites on the Internet. Disney sponsored demonstrations of the title in each Computer City's locations. A toll-free telephone number was set up to provide consumer support six days a week for all Disney Interactive product. The campaign continued until the Toy Story film was released on video in sell-through, with Toy Story Activity Center and the Toy Story Animated Storybook being featured in a trailer on the video release. In addition, "A cross-promotion with Campbell Soup's Spaghetti-O's" was planned, as well as a cross-promotion with McDonald's to begin in November, at which time, a McDonald's activity book would feature a coupon offering consumers a free CD holder with the purchase of the StoryBook CD-ROM".Commercial success
By February 18, 1995, Disney's Animated Storybook: The Lion King had sold more than 200,000 copies since its November 1994 release." About 30% of these units were sold through mass merchants like Wal-Mart, Kmart, Target and Sears. Eventually, the title sold 400,000 copies. The Lion King became the top selling children's title in both 1994 and 1995. In 1994 it was the 7th best-selling CD-ROMs after Myst, Doom II, 5 ft. 10 PAK Volume 1, Star Wars Revel Assault, The 7th Guest, and Microsoft Encarta. In May 1995, Winnie the Pooh and The Lion King were 2nd and 10th best selling Home Education games. By June 1995, it was still the #1 children's software. Winnie the Pooh In the Honey Tree was the 3rd most popular title in the Macintosh category, sold across seven Software Etc. stores in the Washington area in the week ending December 28, 1996. Together, The Lion King and a Winnie the Pooh title grossed between $1 million and $2 million in the fourth quarter of 1994. It ultimately garnered the overall top spot for educational titles sold between January and December. NewMedia's bestseller list of CD-ROM titles found The Lion King to be the fourth best-selling title in April and May, 1995. According to PC Data data released in November 1995, The Lion King had the 8th highest retail penetration, being featured in at least three-quarters of 16 major chains. In December 1995, Pocahontas was the tenth best selling CD-ROM software title of any genre. Disney's Animated StoryBook: Pocahontas and Disney's Animated StoryBook: Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree were among the top three sellers for the 1995 Christmas season. In the week ended January 31, 1996, Disney No. 1 in market share for educational CD-ROMs in December, capturing 13.2% of the market. In the last week of December 1995, Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree and The Lion King were the top two best selling education titles. Pocahontas and Winnie the Pooh In the Honey Tree were the 2nd and 5th most popular titles in the Macintosh category sold by 11 Software Etc. stores in the Washington area in the week ending February 3, 1996, and 10th and 2nd in the Macintosh category sold by 10 Software Etc. stores in the Washington area in the week ending March 30, respectively. From January to April 1996, these two games were ranked among the top three titles in the Education category, according to PC Data. By May 1996, the first five titles in the series were some of the best selling children's titles in the United States. On May 13, 1996, PR Newswire reported that in the three weeks since the release of Disney's Animated Storybook: Toy Story, the game had sold more than 100,000 copies at retail. The same day, Pocahontas was named the second-highest selling title in the Macintosh category sold by 10 Software Etc. stores in the Washington area in the week that ended May 4, after Myst. In the week ended August 10, 1996, Toy Story and Pocahontas were the 5th and 7th best selling education titles. Revenues from Toy Story were included in Pixar's second quarter financial report. The Guardian notes The Toy Story Animated Storybook sold well, "in terms of a quasi-educational CD-Rom". In December 1996's education hits list, 101 Dalmatians and Toy Story occupied the 1st and 4th spots respectively. Throughout 1996, Toy Story sold more than 500,000 units generating $15.9 million in U.S. sales. Disney's holiday blitz made shoppers buy enough copies of 101 Dalmatians Animated Storybook to make it the best-seller on the chart. In the week ending February 8, 1997, Hunchback was the 4th best selling education title. In the first five months of 1997, 101 Dalmatians was the best-selling educational title, making $4.4 million in sales and helping Disney reach 12% of the market. In May 1997, 101 Dalmatians and Toy Story were the 1st and 10th best selling Home Education and Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree and Pocahontas were 3rd and 4th in Home Education Macintosh. In the week ending August 10, 1996, the animated storybooks of Toy Story, Winnie the Pooh In the Honey Tree, and Pocahontas were the 5th, 6th, and 7th most popular titles in the education category sold by seven Software Etc. stores in the Washington area, respectively. Disney's Animated Storybook: Toy Story was the best selling software title of 1996, selling over 500,000 copies. The 1996 games Toy Story Animated Storybook and Toy Story Activity Center had a combined sales total of around one million units by March 31, 1997. In March 1997, Disney's Animated StoryBook: 101 Dalmatians, Disney's Animated StoryBook: The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and Disney's Animated StoryBook: Toy Story sold 2nd, 8th, and 11th best in the education category. Two games were best sellers in the DOS/Windows category in the first half of 1997, while two were best sellers in the Macintosh category. The Hunchback of Notre Dame was among the top-10-selling children's animated CD-ROM titles for 1997. Hercules was the best selling educational title of 1997. Throughout 1997, 101 Dalmatians Animated Storybook generated $7.69 million in sales. "Wildly successful", it was followed by a title called Hades' Challenge. In the week ended December 13, 1997 Ariel's Story Studio was the 3rd best selling home education software. Ariel's Story Studio was the 10th top-selling home education program across nine retail chains in the week ending January 31, 1998. In June 1998, Hercules was the 5th best selling educational software in the UK. Ariel's Story Studio was the 5th best selling home education software in the week ended June 25. and 6th in the week ended July 4. In the week ended July 4, 1998 Mulan and Toy Story were the 1st and 5th best selling home-education titles. According to PC Data of Reston, Mulan Animated Storybook Disney was the top-selling home education software at 11 software retail chains, representing 47 percent of the U.S. market, for the week ending July 25. In the week ended August 15, Mulan was the 7th best selling educational software. By October 1998, The Lion King had sold over 1 million units.Critical reception
In general, later titles received more negative press while positive reviews were written about earlier titles. Meanwhile, the Toy Story title was highlighted with critical acclaim and Ariel's Story Studio was nominated for Computer Edutainment Game of the Year at the first D.I.C.E. Awards, losing to Where in Time Is Carmen Sandiego? The game also received a Best Educational Software award from DiscoverySchool.com. In 1994, Media Station received the 1995 Michigan's Leading Edge Technologies Award for the inventions and the applications that the company developed using them in software such as The Lion King, Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree, Hunchback, and 101 Dalmatians. Upon its release, The Lion King received 'Pick of the Year' by Entertainment Weekly. The Lion King received the most votes for the 1995 Computer Retail Week.winner in the Best Educational Software category, but it was disqualified due to being released before January 1. Parents reviewed Winnie the Pooh and the Honey as part of their series entitled The best of 1995: Software.Gameplay and plot
Computer Shopper positively compared the series to Living Books' Arthur's Reading Race and the Living Books title The Berenstain Bears Get in a Fight. saying the activities in Disney's Animated Storybook were "purely entertaining". Computer Shopper favourably compared the games to Little Ark Interactive's Story of Creation. According to Albuquerque Journal, the games featured "some of the latest CD-ROM technology". Three of the games were featured in The New York Times Guide to the Best Children's Videos. Multimedia World wrote that the series offers winners that everyone can enjoy, from toddlers to adults." Family PC Magazine called the series "a big hit", while USA Today said it was a "guaranteed kid pleaser". Carol S. Holzberg of Computer Shopper said the games paled in comparison to the films they were based on, though felt they were still "excellent" and "engaging". Chicago Sun-Times thought it was a "perfect digital playmate". A reviewer from SuperKids wrote that the game was "disappointing in comparison" to previous Disney's Animated Storybook titles, noting that the game, like the movie, contained falsehoods about the Hercules story. Buffalo News said it "frankly, ah, stinks". FamilyPC's 19 playtesters gave the series a positive assessment. Discovery Education wrote that the games were "fun and creative", and that it would appeal to children aged three to eight. The Boston Herald said The Little Mermaid's strong point was in its soundtrack and karaoke activity, as opposed to AnastasiaThe Washington Times thought the game was "excellent", and recommended parents to buy it in a package with The Little Mermaid Print Studio. In another article, the newspaper deemed it "brilliantly executed" and a "splash hit". David Bloom of Daily News said that Mulan was "well-done", and thought the "greater strength of the program" was the inclusion of additional activities and games beyond the storybook, such as a dress-up room for Mulan to try on traditional clothing. Meanwhile,The Boston Herald thought the game was a mixture of "absurdly simple tasks" and "practically impossible ones" while finding the dialogue "repetitive" and "irritating". Joseph Szadkowski of The Washington Post
Education and girl-orientation
The Exceptional Parent recommended the series due to allowed parents to "develop child's interest in words and reading". Daily News appreciated that some of the more difficult words came with their own poems to help players understand their meanings. The Beacon News reported that a three-year-old girl "already knows more about computers than people several times her age" because the game reads to her and lets her interact with the story. Daily Record praised Disney's creation of quality software in an untapped market, writing that through this series, the company "manages to home in on a niche market others tend to ignore – the ankle-biters who can work a keyboard and mouse as efficiently as a rattle or a spinning top". A review in The Austin Chronicle praised the inclusion of brain-stimulating puzzles, and a thesaurus feature for "highlighted words in the narration", adding that its appeal to adults was "the true genius of a disk like this". The Washington Post deemed it "a cut above" the standard for educational video games.SuperKids thought The Little Mermaid was a crowdpleaser, and a nice entry in the edutainment category that would appeal to girls. Rocky Mountain News gave the game a "tentative endorsement", noting that it helps to counteract the bias toward boy-oriented video games, and offered an opportunity got "computer-savvy girls to cheer". Lynn Voedisch of the Chicago Sun-Times specifically described Pocahontas as a "girl-targeted CD-ROM". The Age felt that Mulan saw a "departure from most of Disney's appeal-to-everyone efforts", and would therefore be of more interest to girls than boys. Sydney Morning Herald thought the "beautiful storybooks" and "gorgeous grotto" would make Ariel's Story Studio popular with girls. The Chicago Tribune described Hercules as the anti-Pocahontas due to having boy-oriented games and activities.
Audiovisuals
The first full-length Disney animated film to be adapted into an adventure game was The Black Cauldron; it wasn't until Disney's Animated Storybook that Disney achieved a "stunning visual quality" that was comparable to the theatrical films, according to Disney Stories: Getting to Digital. The Boston Herald thought the games were "beautifully produced", though did not consider them edutainment. Daily News felt the series offered "terrific" examples of the interactive storybook genre, which read as pages out of a printed children's book. Coming Soon Magazine felt the series "has many things to attract young children like animal characters and great artwork". Beth Kljajic from Adventure Learning Club said the games were "very poorly written". Entertainment Weekly said the series offered stripped-down bare-bones retellings. The Mirror called the series"delightful", "film-quality", and "colorful", while suggesting that young players would be "entranced" by the animated storybooks. Knight Ridder Tribune said the games' "lush animation" succeeded in "capturing the warm and fuzzy texture" of the source material. The Columbian writer Mike Langberg wrote that the games "faithfully reproduces the story, visual style, voices and music" of the original. A Knight Ridder Tribune article written by John J. Fried and William R. Macklin commented that while Pocahontas was "beautifully rendered", it was "poorer" than Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree due to not featuring any songs.Entertainment Weekly commented that Disney's Animated Storybook contained "all the familiar scenes" from the movies they were based on, albeit augmented by entertaining point-and-click activities. When comparing the Hunchback and Dalmatians Storybooks, a writer from the Sun-Sentinel said "the Hunchback
Audiovisuals of ''Toy Story''
Being developed from employees at Pixar Studios who worked on the original rather than a third-party developer, Toy Story has been frequently highlighted as having an audio-visual quality separate from other entries in the series. The Times Leader gave particular praise to Toy Story which it felt was a "major jump in entertainment and new media technology, where we get a glimpse of the magic of bringing a feature film to home computers" due to its dance, glow-in-the-dark, and virtual flashlight sequences. Similarly, Detroit Free Press highlighted the title's "whiz-bang animation, that "far surpass much of the stiffer animation of other CD-ROM games for kids", though felt a missed opportunity for "imaginative interaction" was for players to create custom toys from parts like Sid. El Paso Times wrote that Toy Story "delivers almost everything that made the movie special". Entertainment Weekly praised the animation, noting "the sequences... have an immediate, you-are-there quality", in comparison to other video game adaptions of movies which "present scenes from the original flick in a truncated, non-interactive manner that can be mildly off-putting for both kids and adults". WorldVillage agreed that Toy Story was "indeed a work of art". The Washington Post said the absence of the film's two main stars "does not diminish the enjoyment" of the game. The Buffalo News said the game "captures the spirit and humor of the film". The Record thought the game had "first-rate production values". Robertson Stephens analyst Keith Benjamin said "This is the most compelling CD-ROM title I have ever seen". The Mirror said the game was "brilliant", while MacWorld praised the game for its visual similarity to the film it was adapted from, commenting that "the 3-D imaging is superb". Entertainment Weekly felt the animated sequences had an " immediate, you-are-there quality". Popular Magazine felt the visual results were "much the same as the film". Macworld felt the "3-D imaging is superb for a children's edutainment package". PC World felt the game's humor would work on both child and adult levels. In a rare negative review, The New York Times wrote that the game was like the film except less interested, less detailed, simplified, and purporting to be educational. Design News said it "features the best 3-D graphics and animated sequences I have ever seen on a computer program". Toronto Star deemed it animation "virtually TV quality". The Washington Post wrote the title offered evidence of more medium-appropriate software and moving away from the "profitable-but-inane" storybook format. The Washington Post said the game was "a groundbreaker that takes so many liberties with the basic "animated storybook" format", and "threatens to liberate the entertainment megalith from the profitable-but-inane "storybook" format".Part of Disney franchises
Much of the discourse was around how the games fit into the larger Disney franchises. Daily Herald thought the series was a "tried-and-true formula". Daily News though noted this "blizzard computerized spinoffs" as Disney's "attempt to rule the children's software market". In addition, the site felt that the genre was commonplace, and that Disney's offerings followed the formula for CD-ROM-based talking storybooks. The Philadelphia Inquirer felt the series "illustrates the dangers of runaway cross-promotion", deeming it Disneymania at its most bland, uninteresting, mundane, stale, and wafer-thin, and accusing it of following the trend rather than setting it.Detroit Free Press felt that the games would only appeal to fans of their respective film inspirations. The Times suggested that reading with one's favourite Disney characters might make learning fun. Superkids felt that "much of its entertainment value comes from its tight linkage" to the movies they are based on. Knight Ridder Tribune felt that despite the Disney franchises' "omnipresent commercial persona", the games greatly appeal to children and parents alike. Joseph Szadkowski of The Washington Times thought that the video games were a product line extension that served as an example of how Disney was "cram the movie...down the throats of unsuspecting consumers", although he said the graphics were "amazing". A writer from Entertainment Weekly praised Disney's "slick" series of digital pop-up books. Lisa Karen Savignano of Allgame gave the series rating from 2.5-4 stars, deeming each entry much like the other" in the series. A reviewer of The Washington Post thought the series was an "ignorable, formulaic concoction" in one article published on July 11, 1997, while six days later The Washington Post writer Joe Szadkowski said in another article that the games were "completely new and original". PC Entertainment felt the edutainment games allowed their respective properties to "live on", though that they would only appeal to die-hard fans of the originals. The Chicago Tribune felt the series was a way for Disney to flex its "synergistic marketing muscles". When Toronto Star heard about the series, they were concerned that "they would flood the market with mediocre, repurposed products in a bald attempt to exploit their tremendous treasure trove of highly marketable and much-loved characters".
Washington Post felt the games were part of "merchandising empire just as a good children's story should ." Tekst.no: strukturer og sjangrer i digitale medier acknowledged that Disney had been adapting many of their cartoons into storybooks, describing their efforts as having "varying results". Entertainment wrote the games' releases were "timed to meet inquisitive and acquisitive instincts" around the release or re-release of their related films. PC Mag expressed surprise that the games, against all odds, were able to match the magic of the properties that progenitored them, saying the game never gets tiresome. The LA Times argues "Disney succeeded in spite of the problems with its games because of the extraordinary popularity of its characters and because the parents who buy the products trust the Disney name--and aren't necessarily looking for leading-edge technology". The Lion King animated storybook: A case study of aesthetic and economic power argues that "the words and images produced by large studios can be mass mediated in ways that construct those images as symbolic traditions that have exchange value" and that "children buy the Lion King animated storybook because they like the recognition they feel upon seeing the words and images of this product". The Seattle Times noted "You can count on Disney Interactive following up the release of Disney animated features with an animated storybook", noting that while the games stuck to a " more rigid cookie-cutter formula", Mulan broke the mold by offering a slimmer storyline and a highly interactive interface, though noting the CD was only two-thirds filled and could have gained from visual assets. Chicago Tribune noted Ariel's Story Studio had a "marketing push" from the re-release of the film. The game gave kids the "common ground...for socializing" due to being able to "discuss the characters and story of the film they all knew" and "feel part of a visual/aural/narrative tradition they...believed in. Children and adults enjoyed interacting with characters who looked and acted like those from their favourite movie. In Disney's Animated Storybook: The Lion King, instead cutting and cropping artwork from the film and forcing it into the new format. The Washington Post suggested the storybooks were "cheery" versions of their films that out the scary parts, describing them as "thoughtfully designed products marred by a few miscalculations that lessen their impact". Toronto Star felt that with the animated storybooks, Disney had "perfected the edutainment CD-ROM formula". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution deemed this strategy as Disney "exporting its famous animation to computer CDs". The Washington Post described Hercules as "inevitable Disney multimedia repurposing", adding "finally a spin-off in perfect alignment with the product it supports - both the movie and the CD-ROM are ignorable, formulaic concoctions that show similar disrespect for their source material". A former Disney Interactive employee said in 1997 "A persistent belief by Disney Interactive that it could spend freely and build markets where research showed none existed doomed titles such as The Pocahontas Animated Storybook" due to that release ranking 67th in dollar share among education titles in February. Promo felt the games' "real power lies in supporting the video movie title". Computer Retail Week noted that success followed "virtually any title tied to a Disney movie". Billboard described them as "Releases linked to established franchises-from hit movies to time-tested characters". The Washington Post deemed the series to be "little more than serviceable CD-ROM translations". Commenting on Hunchback, Allgame identified a causal relationship in that "An easily forgettable movie led to a very easily forgettable game". The Wall Street Journal argued that "before Disney came along, parents often purchased educational software based on teachers' recommendations. Disney changed that because parents trusted the Disney name".