American Girl (video game series)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
American Girl
Edutainment, Adventure
Developer(s)
Various, including
  • The Learning Company
  • Mattel Interactive
  • ImaginEngine
  • Bon Art Studio
  • Webfoot Technologies
  • American Girl
  • [x]cube Games
First releaseThe American Girls Premiere
1997
Latest releaseAmerican Girl World
2018

American Girl is a series of video games developed by various studios and distributed by American Girl.

Games in the American Girl series are based upon characters and stories set within the toy line's fictional universe, from historical-era characters like Kit Kittredge, to contemporary ones such as those from the Girl of the Year line or WellieWishers. Common gameplay elements within the series center upon educational activities, mostly focusing around American history and culture, though other aspects such as adventure, puzzle or even action elements are occasionally interspersed in some of the games.

Titles

Release timeline
1997
Julie Finds a Way
2008American Girl: Mia Goes for Great
Kit Mystery Challenge!
American Girl: Kit - A Tree House of My Own
2009
2010
2011Secret Wardrobe
Shave Ice
Cheer On!
2012Gymtastic
Port to Port
2013Paint Ponies
2014Tropical Toss
Playful Pet
Isabelle Dance Studio
2015Scene Sounds
Maryellen TV Console
Grace Sweet Shop
Rocket Rally
2016Lea's Born for Adventure
WellieWishers
2017WellieWishers: Garden Fun
2018American Girl World

Edutainment games

The first two games in the series marked American Girl's (then known as Pleasant Company) expansion into video games. They featured American Girl's historical character roster, which of the time consisted of six characters representing various periods of American history.

  • The American Girls Premiere is the first entry in the series, developed and published by The Learning Company for American Girl and released in 1997 for personal computer platforms. The game allows the creation and direction of unique stage plays starring the Historical Characters, from Felicity Merriman to Molly McIntire. The Second Edition release, which was released in 1998, adds Josefina Montoya to the roster.
  • The American Girls: Dress Designer is the second entry in the series, developed and released by Mattel Interactive for Windows in 1999. This was essentially an interactive version of the paper doll sets American Girl sold featuring their Historical Characters roster, from colonial era Felicity Merriman to World War II-era Molly McIntire. The game allows players to create and edit period clothes for the historical characters. Users can choose between different patterns, styles, designs and trim for each character, and they can also build and print out a fashion portfolio.

Besides Premiere and Dress Designer, Mattel Interactive also published Your Notebook (with help from Amelia), a software toy in the form of an interactive journal based on the

KnowWonder
, Your Notebook allowed the user to write their own journals with the help of the titular protagonist, and comes with stamps, text effects and styles to which the user can add to their entries.

Games published by THQ

In the late 2000s American Girl collaborated with THQ for a number of games based on their franchise. Three of the games were released exclusively for Microsoft Windows, all of which are presented in a 2.5D isometric viewpoint using pre-rendered characters and backgrounds, while the other two, namely Julie Finds a Way and Kit Mystery Challenge!, are released for the Nintendo DS.

Mobile apps

Since 2011 American Girl released

software toys for young girls. Most of the games, which are published by the company, are exclusive to iOS, though Isabelle Dance Studio and Grace Sweet Shop were later ported
to Android; newer titles in the series also saw simultaneous iOS and Android releases. American Girl has since de-listed their mobile games from app stores, instead offering simple browser games through their Play minisite.

Common elements

Most games in the series puts players in the role of an American Girl character, typically a Historical/BeForever character like Kit Kittredge or a contemporary one such as any of the Girl of the Year characters like Grace Thomas, Isabelle Palmer or Lea Clark. The games' presentation may vary from one title to the next, from an edutainment game typical of The American Girls Premiere and Dress Designer, a Nancy Drew-esque mystery as seen in Kit Mystery Challenge, to an action-adventure platform game as seen in Lea Born for Adventure.

History

The first game in the series,

Pleasant Company into the digital software space.[8] Linda Ehrmann, vice president of Internet business strategy consulting firm Grey Interactive, said that the video game had a due potential as it was entering a relatively untapped market, commenting that in the interactive media space, "girls are for the most part totally ignored".[9]

Reception

The American Girls Premiere was released to mostly positive reception, and received accolades from various parenting organizations; subsequent games in the series however received tepid to negative scores from gaming publications - American Girl: Kit Mystery Challenge for example was panned for its repetitive gameplay, tank controls and lack of replay value.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ The Amelia's Notebooks line was released under the American Girl label from 1999 to 2003, but is generally not considered to be a part of the main franchise.

References

  1. ImaginEngine (2007-10-15). Julie Saves The Eagles (Microsoft Windows) (1.0 ed.). THQ
    . Level/area: Readme.txt. Uses Lua 5.1 Copyright (C) 2003-2006 Tecgraf, PUC-Rio.
  2. ^ "American Girl: Julie Saves the Eagles". Parents' Choice Foundation. Archived from the original on 4 November 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  3. ^ DeVries, Jack (16 January 2008). "American Girl: Julie Finds a Way Review". IGN. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  4. ^ a b DeVries, Jack (1 August 2008). "American Girl: Kit Mystery Challenge Review". IGN. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  5. ^ "Bon Art Studio: High Quality Art Solutions and Services for Game Developers, Publishers and Producers". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 January 2012.
  6. ^ "Paint Ponies on the App Store on iTunes". Apple Inc. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  7. ^ "Isabelle Dance Studio (iOS)". VGChartz. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  8. ^ Ray, Robin (October 26, 1997). "All dolled up but nowhere to go". The Boston Herald. Archived from the original on October 8, 2016.
  9. ^ "SOFTWARE DESIGNERS GET WITH THE PROGRAM -- AT LAST, THEY'RE DISCOVERING GIRLS". The Buffalo News. November 9, 1997. Archived from the original on October 8, 2016.