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History of MECC and Oregon Trail

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."

3 of 149 comments (clear)

  1. Not a single bison shall stand by HaymarketRiot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Man, I miss shooting the hell out of all those bison. The shooting sections of that game really brought out a kill everything that moves mentality. Half the time I wouldn't even need food, but just wanted to shoot things.

    1. Re:Not a single bison shall stand by Broken+scope · · Score: 5, Funny

      [save game]
      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. .. wtf?

      [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? ... you ford the river.

      Everyone makes it across safely.

      WTF?

      --
      You mad
  2. The Censorship of the Oregon Trail by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having grown up in Minnesota, I was raised in a grade school that had many copies of the Oregon Trail.

    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 ..." or something like that, it said "Indians Attack!" and then you were holding a shotgun from the point of view of the shooter. There were three frames of images with a Native American on horseback and a bow. He would ride at a random speed in front of you and you had to shoot when he was in the middle of the screen. The better you did, the less supplies you lost.

    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.

    --
    My work here is dung.