showing 2 games

namepublisher(developer)year arrow_downwarddescription
The Secret Codes of C.Y.P.H.E.R.: Operation Wildlife  Tanager Software Productions1991At a secret facility hidden in a feed store, decipher a variety of encrypted messages for various clients. Don't let your decryptions fall into the wrong hands. Some field work consisting of receiving, delivering, and verifying messages. Possibly one of the most realistic 'secret agent' games ever made. Note however, real would encrypted messages are almost always about verifying the authenticity of the message rather than obfuscating the message itself.

This is and edutainment game with cryptography, mammals, botany, geography, English, American Sign Language, Morse Code, Braille, and Semaphore. 4 Levels of difficulty. There is a multiplayer feature that allows one player to send encrypted messages to another.
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The Wind in the Willows LeisureLand1993This is the second game in Leisuresoft's "Leisureland" series of adventure games aimed at kids ages 5 to 8 who are learning to read. Unfortunately, it suffers from obscure puzzles and annoying random elements that will make it an exercise in frustration for all but the most patient kids. The plot will be familiar to anyone who has read a few fairy tales: you are well-mannered mole called, uhm... Mole, who awakes one day to find that his friend Toad has been kidnapped. Gameplay consists of going to various locations and choosing what to do from a number of multiple choices. What makes the game extremely aggravating is the fact that some objects you need, as well as some crucial encounters, are random. This makes it almost impossible to finish the game without many trial-and-error sessions where you go everywhere over and over again to trigger the missed event. Worse still, the objects you collect are used automatically almost every time they are needed - there is no way to select each item from the inventory individually to be used. This limitation destroys any potential for fostering logic and deduction skills in kids, and makes the game very passive. Overall, Wind in The Willows is a disappointing title whose "educational" value is limited only to perhaps increasing reading skills in young kids. labelimagesubject
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