Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Incredible Machine

I had find many products about video game machine from some websites such as


Magnetic Dart

1)It is a safe game that suit for both children and elders. 2)You can use it to exercise your eye and health.

Board Game, Wooden Board Game

We are professional board game and wooden board game manufacturer and supplier in China.
And you can see more from classic sega games original nes games chevy center console duke nukem game bubble bobble playstation free online car games electronic sudoku handheld game jamma game donkey kong gba For the 1975 documentary film, see The Incredible Machine (film).Screenshot from The Incredible Machine Version 3.0Screenshot from Return of the Incredible Machine: ContraptionsThe Incredible Machine (aka TIM) is a series of computer games that were originally designed and coded by Kevin Ryan and produced by Jeff Tunnell, the now-defunct Jeff Tunnell Productions, and published by Dynamix; the 1993 through 1995 versions had the same development team, but the later 20002001 titles had different designers. All versions were published by Sierra Entertainment.Contents1 Objective 2 Versions 2.1 The Incredible Machine 2.2 The Incredible Machine 2 2.3 The Incredible Machine 3 2.4 Return of The Incredible Machine: Contraptions 2.5 The Incredible Machine: Even More Contraptions 2.6 Incredible Toons 3 Awards 4 Availability 5 See also 6 References 7 External links // ObjectiveThe general objective of the games is to create a series of Heath Robinson, or Rube Goldberg devices: arrange a given collection of objects in a needlessly complex fashion so as to perform some simple task (for example, "put the ball into a box" or "light a candle"). Available objects ranged from simple ropes and pulleys to electrical generators, bowling balls, and even cats and mice. The levels usually have some fixed objects that cannot be moved by the player, and so the only way to solve the puzzle is carefully arrange the given objects around the fixed items. There is also a "freeform" option that allows the user to "play" with all the objects with no set goal or to also build their own puzzles with goals for other players to attempt to solve.Notably, the games simulated not only the physical interactions between objects, but also ambient effects like varying air pressure and gravity. The engine does not use a random number generator in its simulation of physics, assuring that the results for any given "machine" are reproducible.VersionsThe series featured the following versions:The Incredible Machine (1992, MS-DOS / Macintosh / 3DO) The Even More Incredible Machine (1993, MS-DOS / Microsoft Windows, Macintosh) Sid & Al's Incredible Toons (1993, MS-DOS) The Incredible Toon Machine (1994, Microsoft Windows, Macintosh) The Incredible Machine 2 (1994, MS-DOS / Macintosh) The Incredible Machine 3 (1995, Microsoft Windows / Macintosh) Return of the Incredible Machine: Contraptions (2000, Microsoft Windows / Macintosh) The Incredible Machine: Even More Contraptions (2001, Microsoft Windows / Macintosh) The developers of the series have been criticized by fans for recycling content, specifically all the games after The Incredible Machine 2, rather than creating new additions to the games.The Incredible MachineThe Incredible Machine, the first game in the series, was originally going to be developed for Electronic Arts for the Commodore 64 in 1984, but Dynamix worked on Arcticfox for the Amiga instead and work did not start on The Incredible Machine until the spring of 1993. The Even More Incredible Machine was actually an extended version of the original The Incredible Machine and had around 160 levels, about twice the number of levels in the original game, and also had quite a few more parts.The Incredible Machine 2The Incredible Machine 2 introduced new levels, an extended assortment of parts, a new interface, significantly improved graphics, sounds, and music, and two player hotseat play. It also improved on the "freeform" mode, allowing players to create completely playable puzzles by defining not only the participating parts, but also the set of circumstances under which the puzzle will be considered "solved". In terms of gameplay, this version provided the biggest addition to the series, while subsequent updates were basically only ports of the game to newer operating systems with updated graphics/sounds and sometimes new puzzles, but no new parts.The Incredible Machine 3The Incredible Machine 3, on some releases entitled Professor Tim's Incredible Machines, contained the same levels as The Incredible Machine 2, but had a new interface, as well as compatibility with Windows 3.1. It also allowed the player to build backgrounds for the puzzles and to scale the playing field.Return of The Incredible Machine: ContraptionsIn the next two versions, Return of The Incredible Machine: Contraptions and The Incredible Machine: Even More Contraptions, the game interface was updated again with new graphics, music, and sounds. They featured mostly new levels, except that Return of The Incredible Machine: Contraptions contained many levels (including most of the tutorial levels) from The Incredible Machine 3. The custom backgrounds and variable...(and so on)


Games in Wooden Box

1) 3 in 1 game set 2) Checkers, chess, backgammon 3) Color wooden box
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