History of MECC and Oregon Trail 149
Gammu writes "For the past thirty years, many children have been raised with a heavy diet of MECC games like Oregon Trail, Odell Lake and Lemonade Stand. These products weren't developed by a major game developer. Rather, they were developed by the state of Minnesota for use in their schools. What began as an initiative to get Minnesota students ready for the micro-computer age turned into a multi-million dollar a year business whose products are still used in US schools even a decade after MECC was sold off to another developer."
That takes me back... (Score:5, Funny)
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Not a single bison shall stand (Score:5, Insightful)
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Congratulations.
The game was intended to teach but many people were lost on this part in my opinion
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(Sorry...)
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Re:Not a single bison shall stand (Score:5, Funny)
I hated seeing that.
Re:Not a single bison shall stand (Score:5, Funny)
River depth 3 feet
1: Ford the River?
2: Seal boat and cross the river?
3: Wait?
Ford the River!!
Your wagon turned over
You lost 3 Oxen
You lost 1200lbs of food
You lost 500 bullets
You broke a wheel
You broke an axle
You broke a yoke
Your wagon caught fire and exploded
Max drowned and died... we never found the body
Johnny died in the wagon fire
Betty was crushed by the panicking ox
Bill drowned
Jeff caught Cholera and died in under 30 seconds, a new record!
Jeff came back as a Zombie and killed everyone else, game over.
[load saved game]
river is 3 ft deep
1: Ford the River?
2: Seal boat and cross the river?
3: Wait?
wait
river is 7 ft deep
1: Ford the River?
2: Seal boat and cross the river?
3: Wait?
seal boat and cross river
The wagon sank, everyone DIED...
Mother Fucker..
[load save game]
river is 3ft deep
1: Ford the River?
2: Seal boat and cross the river?
3: Wait?
wait
The river is 19 feet deep, is flooding, full of debris, on fire, and has piranhas in it.
1: Ford the River?
2: Seal boat and cross the river?
3: Wait?
Everyone makes it across safely.
WTF?
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I believe the phrase you are looking for is "caulk the wagon."
I've been told that a year or two after i graduated my dorm set up a computer with a lot of emulated games on it in the lounge, including Oregon Trail. Every time someone was playing the game and encountered a river everyone in the room would shout out that they should "caulk the wagon." :)
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Re:Not a single bison shall stand (Score:4, Interesting)
And no, he wasn't being sarcastic or anything, he really seemed to have an emotional attachment to electronic buffalo, and punished students who slaughtered them.
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Re:Not a single bison shall stand (Score:5, Funny)
Paging Jack Thompson...Paging Jack Thompson...
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The Censorship of the Oregon Trail (Score:5, Insightful)
But something that isn't often mentioned about the Oregon Trail is the controversy that surrounded one of the first releases about it. We're all very familiar with the original but before that there was an even older one with crappier graphics. I distinctly remember playing the very old one only to have the teacher come up to my computer, ask me where I got that & then she took the disc and formatted it. Now that was curious behavior for a teacher.
So I came into the lab after school, got another copy of the disk from where I had found the original (stacks of old disks were common) and popped it in. The graphics were worse but I soon realized why this particular version was frowned upon. Instead of saying, "You have encountered Native Americans
I could see how you could argue either way to keep that in the game. Maybe that's really how some Native Americans reacted to settlers. Maybe you don't want your kid thinking that Native Americans were (and still are) like that. One thing is for sure--it was never in another version of the Trail.
Minnesota's history is ingrained with Native Americans. I have many Native American friends and thoroughly enjoy Pow Wows & their amazing celebrations. At the same time, I recognize that there was conflict going on with settlers being killed or wounded at towns like Milford, Acton & Slaughter Slough. Interesting history to me, haven't heard anyone who's known about these events aside from Native Americans.
Is it right to just forget about it? I personally don't think denial is the best way to deal with history. Although, the displacement of Native Americans from the east to parts further west like Oklahoma, Minnesota & Wisconsin (resulting in many deaths) isn't very widely known by most Americans.
Re:The Censorship of the Oregon Trail (Score:5, Interesting)
A lot of the history of conflict between Native Americans and European settlers is swept under the carpet now -- we, as Americans, don't like to admit that we waged a war of genocide. Sure, there were people who actually had respect for Native Americans, and the war was never couched that way, but when push came to shove, Native Americans were exterminated or driven from land that settlers wanted.
Now, as for Oregon Trail, I think it has to do with the changing attitudes about civil rights and respecting other cultures. People became much more aware of the fact that a lot of hatred is learned, and that there is no place for teaching hatred in our schools. Part of the whole anti-discrimination movement of the 60s, 70s, and 80s, I think.
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I think you have that backwards. History is, after all, written by the "winners."
=Smidge=
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I hate this soft culture we are brining up [sic] who don't learn about our travesties done to us and against us. What's next? 50 years from now we learn about how America brutally attacked the germans in World War 2 and Pearl harbor never happened? Operation: Desert Storm was about Americans getting oil, and Iraq's invasion of Kuwait never happened?
Well Smidge, that's partly true, and also largely untrue, particularly with the examples you chose. Critics bring up US atrocities because they're denied or rationalized away, and yet so contrary to the patriotic claims of the Homeland. WW2 Pacific theatre: the Japanese oil supply was being choked by the Americans who wanted to protect their quasi-colonial holdings in the pacific, conflict was inevitable and invited, and their crypto is broken, so PHbr was expected. The Japanese were insanely inhuman to p
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Otherwise I agree.
=Smidge=
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What you're missing is that the things we've done are far worse than anything that's ever been done to us.
That's part of being the "winners" (instead of being good neighbors.)
I live in a town called Kelseyville. It's named after a man named Kelsey who imprisoned, enslaved, murdered, and raped the local natives. Eventually they rose up and killed him (not his whole family, just him. no massacre here)
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If "real history" came into such edu-sims, they wouldn't be rated E for everyone, and the tribes would've been quite different. Some friendly traders who even offered up their wives for the settlers, believing that this captured their power. Some w
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I can't remember if that
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Some tribes did murder rape and kill.
Some tribes where peaceful and really suffered greatly at the hands of settlers.
Some settlers where every bit as blood thirsty as some of the worst of the tribes.
Then you have acts of individuals and groups of individuals.
There where good and bad people on both sides as well as a complete lack of understand of each other on booth sides.
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First, you have the perspective of the Europeans who came over to settle here. Many of them were fugitives, and were just looking for a safe place to call home. North America looked extremely inviting - it was merely inhabited by barbarians, and open to the taking! Many of the settlers really wanted nothing more than to ju
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Funny you should mention. (Score:2)
You would set out to escape to Canada and freedom. Along the way, you would follow the underground railroad as best as you could. You had to learn things like on what side of a tree moss grew (or be fortunate enough to get a compass), you could
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These days I've amassed a huge collection of software but a lot of the stuff I actually used as a little kid, I can't even find on the sites (asimov etc.), and a lot of that was MECC or Spinnaker.
I'd die if someone showed up a disk image of the Elementary Volume XX whatever that had "Oregon" on it.
Also looking for StoryMaker, Story Machine, FaceMaker and In Search of the Most Amazing Thing (I have the PC versi
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I still blame these guys (Score:2, Funny)
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Oregon Trail (Score:5, Funny)
YOUR MOM has died of dysentery
Good times.
Re:Oregon Trail (Score:5, Funny)
We used to purposely pick names that would look good on the tombstone, since anyone who played the same disk after you would see it when they passed by wherever on the Trail you died. It also let you write an epitaph for yourself, which led to a trail full of stones like..
Here lies HEMAN
skeletor finally won
Here lies SANTA
no more presents for anybody
Here lies (TEACHER'S NAME)
still can't find the on switch on the IIc
Good times.
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Or my personal favorite:
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You get messages like:
God has wondered off
Love has contracted cholera
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Here lies (TEACHER'S NAME) still can't find the on switch on the IIc
Very sad to say, but doing something like this these days would probably have gotten you expelled or sent to an alternative school. It would literally ruin your life.
Opensource Effort (Score:3, Interesting)
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Fond memories (Score:3, Funny)
And, using up the remaining minutes on xtalk and mmt (wait, was that YIM, AIM, or just texting) typing with people from as far away as luvern and worthington - the far reaches of civilization yet as close as a modem. All that time spent on appleseeds (oops, I suppose now I'm busted). And, of course, 'cheating' (no kidding, that was the accusation) on biology homework with just a brief soliloquy of code. *sigh*
It was all fun until the paper ran out. Thank god for crt's.
So much has changed, so much has stayed the same.
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It's amazing to me that I still can't describe just how much fun it was to play a multi-player shoot'em'up with nothing but quickly printed tables of polar coordinates and vectors. How the advent of 300 baud modems made
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L2000,M2,M2
Whew!
I don't remember anymore if those should be comma-separated or not...
I knew a John back in the MTS days. Argiledhel in Rochester. I also remember folks like Coiled Snake on COMBAT taking me out far too many times to recall. Bastage.
*GILDOR*/UN=H7LT263
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The best I ever got was estimating and altering my rotation speed to track the opponent's ships instead of the easier high-speed rotating past them, and waiting for them to drift in front of me. I also remember building up speed, swerving left and right, and eventually swinging 180 degrees as I passed my opponents and timing lasers to fire within a few hundred km after passing them. It was a totally devastating attack, on those few occasions when it worked.
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Eventually I encountered a group of folks who were consistently better than I was, and I started trying out different strategies with actual movement patterns, and I finally figured out how to do a zig-zag rush at people, which is what I think the infamous Coiled Snake did. I also got relativel
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Those programs were rather addictive.
*GILDOR*/UN=H7LT263
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I'd say! I met my wife on MECC 27 years ago, back when I was online 80 hours a week just for fun. Now I have to be online 40 hours a week for work (the other 40 is just for fun.)
Do you remember "limbo" in MTC, where the program's "supervisors" would send you if you annoyed them too much? It was a loop where you had to solve octal math problems before a timer expired (or hang up and get back on again if you couldn't figure them out.)
Hmm (Score:3, Interesting)
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Link? (Score:2)
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Enjoy
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Blame MECC for making me a computer geek! (Score:1)
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-BbT
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You can play these games online! (Score:3, Informative)
the original original (Score:2)
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Anyone remember Robot Odyssey? (Score:1)
Gateway software (Score:4, Funny)
If left unchecked, you can expect that these players will have moved onto a Dope Wars adulthood where they borrow money from shady lenders, sell drugs on the street, and shoot at law enforcement, all while holding onto just a slim dream of retiring to the Carribbean as their only possibility for redemption.
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Related shirt (Score:2)
Idea stolen from Trail West? (Score:4, Interesting)
A couple years ago I got an email from a person trying to get the PET game Trail West to run for his dad (who wrote Trail West) on an emulator and in part of the reply was this message:
If you want to see what Trail West was like, the file is located in this disk image [portcommodore.com], and is playable on the VICE Emulator [viceteam.org]. After LOADing but before RUNing, you need to POKE 639,94 in order to circumvent the ancient copy protection. (my bad, should have fixed it)
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-BbT
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I'm not sure he had all his facts straight. Oregon Trail was written in 1971 [wikipedia.org], six years before the release of the Commodore Pet in 1977. [wikipedia.org] That could hardly be considered "the very next year" after the PET came out.
I'm not sure why the author of "Trail West" would have made such a
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Karnath (Score:2)
Sera
Odell Woods (Score:2)
MECC was for ME! (Score:3, Interesting)
One thing that I haven't heard mentioned yet, though, is Freedom. I remember this game very well. In it, you played a slave in the south, and the game began with your escape. The game randomly generated a character with different starting statistics each time. Sometimes you would be able to read, sometimes not - in which case all signs appeared as gibberish. Sometimes your character would have a compass or tools, other times you would have to rely on the sun or the growth of moss on trees. The game was presented from a first-person perspective in static screens. The goal, of course, was to make it to the Free North. Over the course of the game, the player met sympathetic people who sheltered them, members of the Underground Railroad, and of course, many people trying to catch and return the escaped slave. It was a very deep and engaging game. The Oregon Trail and Odell Lake were educational, but even on an Apple IIGS Freedom was scary and immersive - I really was afraid when I heard that distorted bark and knew I had dogs on my trail (and no cayenne pepper to throw them off!) Of course now I would probably laugh at the simple graphics and sound, but at the time the game was incredible.
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The popularity of Oregon Trail (Score:2)
2 days later I was at work, and a coworker had a blue shirt with an old West font saying "you have died of dysentry."
I never thought an educational game would spawn two different t-shirts with its catchphrase.
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Combat (Score:2)
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The "clans" were very informal (not really a part of the game) but certai
Open Source (Score:2)
My wife worked there (Score:4, Interesting)
Little known fact about OT: if you started on the exact day, followed the exact path and stayed on a specific schedule (resting, waiting, etc) when you got to the Donner Pass you'd die in a snowstorm just like they did. The people working on the project (and all of the historical ones really) were adamant that historical details be correct, so someone embedded this and it stayed though many versions. (I do not recall the details, but I'm sure there are people out there who could produce the specifics.)
Cris E
St Paul, MN
Sigh! (Score:2)
Sigh!...
Oregon Trail taught me about computer security (Score:2)
Of course, the copies of the game at school used the same default password. You couldn't do much; the most exciting thing you could do was increase the frequency of animals, and bump the hunting session time from 30 seconds to
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Once you are recruited from an existing job, there is a premium offered. Working in an industry that people reject offhand also caries a premium.
Bottom line. If you don't personally have a problem with porn, This is a way to triple your take-home pay and build that early retirement fund.
If it sickens you however. Stay right where you are. One must sleep at night.
Remake (Score:2)
Lemonade stand.. (Score:2)
Unfortunately today I just program boring business applications for the mortgage industry and websites... but I remember those days fondly. I wis
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Or look on Cool Tools (http://www.kk.org/cooltools/) for all sorts of strange, cool, inspire your kids things.
Z.
Apple/MECC history (Score:3, Interesting)
In attendance at this conference were some representatives from MECC, who were busy gathering information that would be used by the school districts in Minnesota. By Minnesota state law at the time, no school district could purchase computer equipment unless it had been explicitly authorized by MECC.
Notable enough was that Steve Jobs had impressed the MECC staff sufficiently that they returned home to Minneapolis and changed the computer purchasing orders for the entire state of Minnesota to include the Apple II and Commodore PET as "authorized" purchases... with a strong recommendation to purchase the Apple computers. All told, several hundred Apple computers were purchased by the Minnesota school districts at a very critical time in the history of Apple Computer, and Minnesota began their movement from their central timeshare system to having nearly everything on PCs (and the demise of the MECC timeshare computer).
My own experience more directly in this incident was at Austin High School (Austin, MN) where the high school had a fairly well established Computer Science program (quite popular among the students), and the primary computer system in use for instruction simply crashed cold and hard with no way to repair it. BTW, that was a Wang minicomputer with a whole 32K of RAM shared between 4 terminals. Faced with the possibility of having to cancel the class and re-arrange the schedules of nearly 300 students, the Austin School District decided to check with MECC and see what was available for a replacement. Fresh from the trip to Utah, MECC recommended that they check out the Apple computers from Cupertino, and immediately ordered the computers. BTW, the serial numbers on those computers had only 3 digits when they arrived. I didn't even notice that until 4 years later right before I graduated from H.S., and well after Apple computer was well established and acknowledged as an industry leader.