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Purble Place

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2007 video game
2007 video game
Purble Place
Screenshot of thePurble Place main menu on Windows 7
DeveloperOberon Media
PublisherMicrosoft Corporation
ProducerCara Ely
Programmers
  • Jane Jensen (Lead Developer)
  • Brendan Walker
  • Dan Thompson
  • Tam Armstrong
Platforms
Release
GenresAction, mysteries,puzzle,strategies
ModeSingle-player

Purble Place is a suite of three educationalcomputer games[1] developed by Oberon Media that was included with all versions ofWindows Vista andWindows 7.

Development

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Purble Place was developed in 2005 by Oberon Media, who were contracted byMicrosoft to remake itsinbuilt game suite forWindows Vista with an original children's title. Development took place under one year, complicated by requirements to meet Microsoft's security, political and accessibility standards for the operating system. Due to requirements not to use a third-partygame engine, the development team hired college graduates to implement their "Flat Engine" into the game. The studio viewed development on the game as a minor project secondary to the creation of launch titles for theXbox Live Arcade.[2]Purble Place was publicly introduced in the 2005 community technical preview ofWindows Vista build 5219 in 2005, and packaged withWindows Vista in 2007.[3][4]

The game was produced by Cara Ely, and principally developed by Jane Jensen (lead developer), Brendan Walker, Dan Thompson, and Tam Armstrong.[2]

The game's aesthetic has been cited as an example of theFrutiger Aero style.[2]

Gameplay

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The collection has a single home screen that offers three packs of games:Purble Pairs,Comfy Cakes andPurble Shop.[5]

Purble Pairs

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Purble Pairs is a pattern recognition and memory game similar toConcentration. The object is to clear the tableau in the fewest turns. As the skill level progresses, a timer appears, the grid size increases, and more similar pictures are used. The Beginner level has one 5x5 grid, Intermediate has two 6x6 grids, and Advanced has four 8x8 grids to solve per game (shamrocks, hearts, smiley faces or gumdrops). In addition to a jester that automatically finds another match of an exposed card, numerous special pairs are present in the higher levels, such as a card of the cake batter station inComfy Cakes that shuffles the board when paired, a clock that adds more time to the timer, and aPurble Chef that automatically finds and matches pairs of cards containing cakes. A Sneak Peek coin bonus allows the player to expose all remaining cards for a couple of seconds, but every card exposed in this way is counted as a turn. This game is not available in Purble Place v0.4, an early version from 2005.[citation needed]

Comfy Cakes

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Comfy Cakes is ahand-eye coordination game, the goal being to fill orders in a bakery by assembling acake to match a given cake specification on a mobile by controlling aconveyor belt that brings the cake to various stations. Elements of the cake include cake pan shapes (square, circular or heart-shaped), flavor of batter (strawberry, chocolate or vanilla), three cake layerings (red, green or white), optional icing (strawberry, chocolate or vanilla), and other decorations (for instance, sugar may be sprinkled on top of the cake, and in rarer cases, flames are applied to iced cakes to create a smooth glaze), and a rotate button in v0.4. If the cake does not match the specification on the television, the player is penalized, and the cake gets thrown away. If the player sends two or three incorrect orders, the game is over. After a certain number of correct orders are shipped in the box, the player wins the game, and the score is tabulated. The final score depends upon the number of cakes baked, the number of incorrect orders sent and the efficiency of the player. At higher levels the specifications become more complex and multiple cakes must be manufactured in parallel on a single conveyor belt. The player makes about five or six (or eight in v0.4) cakes in one of the difficulty levels. When the player does not get the features in the wax paper, the computer tells them the move is disallowed.

One of 3125 possible looks for a Purble with five features

Purble Shop

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Purble Shop is a code-breaker game. The computer decides the color of up to five features (topper (hair in version 0.4), eyes, nose, mouth and clothes) that are concealed from the player. The player can choose from an assortment of colors (red, purple, yellow, blue or green), and a color can be used once, several times or not used. The player then attempts to deduce or guess the right feature colors in a limited number of guesses (not available in beginner difficulty). There are three difficulty levels:Beginner with three features in three possible colors; 33 = 27 different possible solutions,Intermediate with 44 = 256 solutions, andAdvanced with 55 = 3125 solutions. The beginner and intermediate levels are guessing games where after each move the computer tells the player which items were right, so there is little scope for deduction. At the advanced level the computer does not tell the player which specific items were right, reporting only the count of picks in the right color and position, and the count of picks in the right color but the wrong position. This level is similar to the colored peg gameMastermind, where success requires logical reasoning (although there is a small chance of succeeding through lucky guesses).

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Purble Place - Microsoft Windows Vista Games, Page 2". Windows.about.com. 2013-06-24. Archived fromthe original on October 4, 2013. Retrieved2013-06-30.
  2. ^abcLee, George Francis (21 May 2024)."Purble Place: the mystery behind gen Z's favourite forgotten video game".The Guardian. Retrieved29 March 2025.
  3. ^Clyman, John (13 September 2005)."Inside Windows Vista Build 5219".PC Magazine.Ziff Davis. Retrieved4 May 2014.
  4. ^Paul Thurrott (2010-10-06)."Microsoft Windows Vista Build 5219 (Community Technical Preview 1) Review | Product Review content from Paul Thurrott's SuperSite for Windows". Winsupersite.com. Archived fromthe original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved2013-06-29.
  5. ^James Yu (July 24, 2006)."A Look at Windows Vista Installed Games, Page 3".GameSpot.CBS Interactive. Archived fromthe original on June 15, 2013. Retrieved2013-06-30.

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