Pinocchio (video game)

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Disney's Pinocchio
PinocchioGameBoyCoverArt.jpg
Game Boy cover art
Developer(s)
  • Virgin Interactive Entertainment (SNES, Genesis)
  • (Game Boy)
Publisher(s)
Director(s)Dan Marchant
Producer(s)
  • Dave Vout
  • Patrick Gilmore
  • Paul Curasi
Designer(s)Dan Marchant
Programmer(s)Mike Ball
Artist(s)Kevin Oxland
Composer(s)Allister Brimble
Platform(s)SNES, Game Boy, Sega Genesis
Release
  • NA: October 1996
  • EU: December 1996
Genre(s)Puzzle, Adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Disney's Pinocchio is a platform puzzle adventure game from Virgin Interactive. It was released in 1996 for the Game Boy, Super NES, and Sega Genesis and is based on Walt Disney's animated feature film Pinocchio, originally released in 1940. A Sega 32X version of the game was in development, but was not released due to the add-on's availability declining nine months prior to the game's official release date.

Storyline[]

The game uses intertitles between levels to convey the story, in the form of a children's storybook. Pinocchio travels from home and must choose to go to School or Easy Street (though the choice does not affect the level order). He then travels from Stromboli's marionette show to Pleasure Island and then into the sea, where he saves Geppetto from inside Monstro and they escape.

Reception[]

Coach Kyle of GamePro gave the Genesis version a negative review, commenting that both the gameplay design and controls are shallow and rudimentary, the character animations are stiff, and the graphics lack detail. He concluded, "What a shame that such a long-awaited game, with such a famous story as a foundation, should turn out to be so disappointing."[2] GamePro also negatively reviewed the Game Boy version, saying it simply translates the simplistic and easy levels from the Genesis version into portable form.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ "16-Bit's Last Stand". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 89. Ziff Davis. December 1996. p. 193.
  2. ^ "Genesis ProReview: Pinocchio". GamePro. No. 100. IDG. January 1997. p. 122.
  3. ^ "Pinocchio". GamePro. No. 100. IDG. January 1997. p. 45.

External links[]


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