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| Link to game |
In summery, in the game, you play a girl named Sissy, who decides to go dimension hopping through magical rainbow portals in search of the illusive 'ponycorns.' What's a ponycorn, you might ask?
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| A cross between a pony and a unicorn if I understand this |
As the mythos goes, a little girl named Cassie and her dad Ryan decided to make a computer game. Now, while the father handled all the technical things like operating flash and typing the actionscript, the kid did the rest: the graphics, the layout of the hotspots, the puzzles, and whatever overarching storyline this had while voice acting duties are divided up amongst the two.
The game doesn't exactly hide this from the player either, I mean, duh! Look at the graphics!
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| Ok Sissy... I'll take your word for it |
So, you walk into the rainbow where a magical thingie gives you a bunch of jars where you can store the ponycorns that you collect along the way.
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| I would totally trust a murmuring wtf |
So, use key on cage, flip over tortoise, turn dino into mouse (she did it with magic, now put your arm down) and stuff ponycorn into jar.
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| That is a red ponycorn |
Ok, so the programing is sound, if not simple, and the gameplay itself is easy but it works and it is an entertaining experience that makes me a little sad that I didn't have a project that my dad and I worked on like this. Graphics are what I expect a five year old to be able to shit out, and the premise is what I'd expect said five year old to dream up and be itching to create.
| Hasbro, you taking notes here? |
I mean, childish graphics and voice work by a little kid and a 30-something year old playing with said kid aside, Sissy's Magical Ponycorn Adventure is a rehashing of My Little Pony with standard point and click mechanics that I've seen dozens of times. I remember being a kid and my creativity didn't go past rehashing shit that was already in my environment: this is why fanfiction tends to be written by kids.
I am not qualified to answer the proverbial "chicken or the egg" question, but considering that ponies are abundant in media targeted to little girls and ponies and horses have been a common fantasy and interest in little girls for a very long time, I'm really going to break some parent's heart and tell them that kids are no more creative than we adults are, and as I write and try to be imaginative, being told that some tike could think up worlds better than I is an insult, and I don't see evidence that its the case.</end run on sentence>
Now, this game is an interesting guide inside the mind of a child, and I was not surprised in what I found. Nevertheless I was in stitches the first time I played it, and it might be worth your while to play it at least once. Though i should warn my reader base: you might feel your balls shrink into your neck.





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