Carmen Sandiego (video game series)

Carmen Sandiego is a series of American educational mystery video games that spawned an edutainment franchise of the same name. The game released in 1985, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, started off both the video game series and the franchise as a whole, which has continued up to the present day. Each game of the series has a particular theme and subject, where the player must use their knowledge to find Carmen Sandiego or any of her innumerable henchmen. This series was originally owned by Broderbund, but is now owned by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Since its initial release the series has won over 125 awards and accolades.[1]

Carmen Sandiego
The first six Carmen Sandiego games during the Broderbund era
Genre(s)Edutainment
Developer(s)
Publisher(s)
Creator(s)
Platform(s)Apple II, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, Windows, Macintosh OS, Xbox, PlayStation 2, GameCube, Nintendo DS, Wii, Facebook, iOS, Browser
First releaseWhere in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?
1985
Latest releaseWhere on Google Earth is Carmen Sandiego?
2019

Design

Background

In 1983, the founders of Broderbund Software, Gary and Doug Carlston, publicly discussed a plan to make edutainment one of their company's three focus areas.[2] The character of Carmen Sandiego was developed by David Siefkin, who drafted the first script of the game for Broderbund beside the Strawberry Canyon swimming pool of the University of California, Berkeley in 1984. Siefkin combined the character's first and last names from the Brazilian singer and actress Carmen Miranda and the city of San Diego, California. Carmen Sandiego was just one of several villains in the original script. She was chosen for the title role by the early project manager Katherine Bird because her name suggested mystery and exoticism, as well as humor. Siefkin departed the project shortly after writing the first script to become a Foreign Service Officer for the U.S. State Department, and served as a press and cultural attaché in several of the countries featured in the game.[3]

Gameplay

The first game in the series released in 1985, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, was designed and written by Gene Portwood and Lauren Elliott, and programmed by Dane Bigham.[4] It established an original formula that was followed very faithfully in all Carmen Sandiego games. This formula involves a series of missions in which the computer player tracks and apprehends each of Carmen Sandiego's underlings. Each case begins with the player being alerted that a spectacular theft has been committed. Immediately transported to the scene of the crime, the player must find clues to infer the suspect's next destination and to create an arrest warrant describing the guilty party's attributes. The culprit travels through a series of different locations around the world in an attempt to shake off any pursuers, so the player will have to continue tracking the thief for some time. The game continues in this manner until the player catches up with the culprit, at which point the thief is arrested, and if the warrant is correct, the player puts the thief in ACME prison. As more and more thieves are arrested, the player rises up through ACME's ranks, and the later cases assigned to the player will become more difficult. On the final case, the perpetrator is revealed to be Carmen Sandiego herself, and the game ends when the player successfully captures her and is later inducted into the ACME Hall of Fame.

With the release of Word Detective, Math Detective, and Great Chase Through Time, Broderbund began to abandon the original formula in 1997. Word Detective and Math Detective involves the player infiltrating V.I.L.E. hideouts around the world and therefore maintain the globe-hopping element of previous games. However, Great Chase Through Time completely abandoned the series' original formula and has the player spending each mission in one time period, where the goal is to create makeshift solutions to any historical problems that the theft has caused and find the thief whom Carmen Sandiego has dropped off. The final mission of the game involves the player to track down Carmen Sandiego similar to the traditional formula, although the player does not construct a warrant.

Style of humor

The games created by Broderbund featured silly humor with a distinctive style of word play with extensive use of puns, rhymes, and alliteration. This style of word play was also present, in varying degrees, in all three Carmen Sandiego television shows.

Gag names ("Hardley Worthit", "Rob M. Blind", "Ruth Less", "Joy Ryder", "M. T. Pockets", etc.) were quite frequently used in the games, often to the point where Carmen herself seemed to be the only person without such a name. Clues about the suspect's next destination often used extended puns (example: "I pumped her for information, but her unrefined answer only suggested a crude plan to visit oil wells near Ahvaz") or rhyming couplets. Even as the games began to abandon their original formula, this word play was still retained. For example, a news report on massive blackouts from Carmen Sandiego Math Detective quotes an official as saying, "We're taking a dim view of the situation".

Although Carmen's V.I.L.E. gang members were often portrayed as cartoonish buffoons, they seemed to be capable of "stealing" landmarks, cities, national parks, notable cultural exports (such as "stealing all the sushi from Japan") and the like. Her thieves have also been known to steal geographic features and even nonexistent map features such as the Mason–Dixon line. Some thefts were even non sequiturs based on word play, such as "robbing the banks of the Nile" or plays on the word "steal" such as "stealing the show".

Video games by Broderbund

Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? (1985, 1996)

The original version was released in 1985. The goal of this game is to track Carmen's villains around the world and arrest them and later ultimately arrest Carmen herself. In order to make an arrest, the user had to have a warrant for the correct villain. The player began the game by visiting the city and country where the crime took place, and then obtaining hints from the bystanders on where the thief went next, leading them on a chase around the world to find the thief before they "get away". In the process, the player collected clues about the villain’s identity to determine who the culprit is. When the player reached their final destination, the player presented the accurate warrant to arrest the villain.

The deluxe version was released in 1992 and featured additional animation and a reworked interface. Sarah Nade was added to this version of Carmen Sandiego Software. CD-ROM versions for DOS and Macintosh were released in 1993, and a Windows version was released in 1994. The Windows version was later re-released as Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? Classic Edition.

The reboot version was released in 1996 with a new gameplay interface and animated characters. This version features QuickTime videos of actress Lynne Thigpen reprising her role as "The Chief" from the eponymous PBS game show, a role she would also play in the U.S.A. and Time reboot games released during that same period.

Where in the U.S.A. Is Carmen Sandiego? (1986, 1996)

This title was released in 1986. Similar to World, the goal of this game is to track Carmen's villains around the United States, and arrest them and later ultimately arrest Carmen herself. In order to make an arrest, the user must have a warrant and, obviously, it has to be the correct warrant. The user gets information from the bystanders on where the thief went next and what the thief looks like. When the user reaches his/her final destination where the villain is going to pass off the loot to Carmen, he/she has to arrest them.

Where in Europe Is Carmen Sandiego? (1988)

Where in Europe Is Carmen Sandiego? is one of the many games in the Carmen Sandiego series. It focuses on the European history and geography. The gameplay is very similar to that of Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, meaning that the player is sent to a location, has to find clues to lead them to the next location, and builds up a warrant along the way. This was the first of the games to have a database built into the crime computer, where players could narrow down their next stop by entering information such as flag colors, currency used, and languages mentioned. Production of the game was discontinued in 1990 due to the fall of the Eastern Bloc and drastic border and government changes that resulted.[5]

Where in North Dakota Is Carmen Sandiego?

Where in Time Is Carmen Sandiego? (1989, 1997)

The original version was released in 1989. The goal of this game is to track Carmen's villains through history and arrest them and later ultimately capture Carmen herself.

The reboot version was released in 1997 and later renamed Carmen Sandiego's Great Chase Through Time. This version was heavily influenced by and features villains from the short-lived PBS game show.

Carmen Sandiego in Japan

Where in America's Past Is Carmen Sandiego? (1991)

This game is widely considered the most informational game of the entire series. Though it may contain some minute differences from the main series, it remains true to it. This game's aim is to capture Carmen's gang of thieves, one by one until all of her henchmen have been caught. This is done by searching for clues, trailing them, identifying them and finally, bringing them in for trial. After all of the henchmen have been caught, the player must then go after Carmen herself. One of the main differences is that the player can receive in-game help. [6]

Where in Space Is Carmen Sandiego? (1993)

The intention of this game is to teach astronomy. The player flies in a rocket ship throughout the solar system, interrogating various alien lifeforms in order to solve the theft of an important part of the solar system (e.g. Saturn's rings). There was only a limited amount of fuel available for travel. So if the player did not ask the right questions on the right planets, or followed the wrong clues, the criminal(s) would get away, leaving the player to start anew with another crime. This version is somewhat similar to Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?. Kneemoi was introduced in this installment.

Junior Detective Edition (1995)

This title was released in 1995 and features characters from the Earth animated series. It uses a simplified version of the standard gameplay designed for younger players.

Carmen Sandiego Word Detective (1997)

This title was released in 1997. This game is intended to teach language arts for kids age 9-12. The game features Chase Devineaux.

In the game Carmen Sandiego has invented a machine called the Babble-On Machine, and the user, playing the role of Agent 13, has to thwart her plans and free all the other agents that have been captured by Carmen.

The game is very similar to Carmen Sandiego Math Detective.

Carmen Sandiego Math Detective (1998)

This title was released in 1998 and is intended to teach Math for kids age 9-12. The game features Chase Devineaux.

In the game, Carmen Sandiego has invented a machine called the Quantum Crystallizer, and the user, playing the role of Agent 9, has to thwart her plans and restore 12 landmarks that Carmen has shrunk with the machine.

The game is very similar to Carmen Sandiego Word Detective.

Video games by The Learning Company (formerly SoftKey)

Carmen Sandiego's ThinkQuick Challenge

This game teaches multiple subjects for kids ages 9–12. It was also the first title in the Carmen Sandiego series to be released by The Learning Company (formerly SoftKey). The game features Chase Devineaux.

In the game, Carmen Sandiego has invented KnowBots to steal knowledge and the player(s) have to try and thwart her plans. This game is set up much like the Carmen Sandiego game shows on PBS and is the only multiplayer game of the series.

Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? Treasures of Knowledge

This game was released in 2001.

The ClueFinders: Mystery Mansion Arcade

Carmen Sandiego appears in the ending scene of The ClueFinders: Mystery Mansion Arcade. She serves as the central antagonist of this title. Carmen was voiced by Christine Crawford, who also voiced her in Treasures of Knowledge.

Carmen Sandiego: The Secret of the Stolen Drums

This game, released in 2004, is the first in the series to give the player complete control of a character in a 3-dimensional world. The avatar, Cole, must maneuver through stages including a museum in New York City, the beaches of New Zealand, and Machu Picchu. The player fights against Carmen's robots and spirits to prevent her from stealing an enchanted diamond, the repository of all the knowledge of the nations.

Mais où se Cache Carmen Sandiego? Mystère au Bout du Monde

This is a French language Carmen Sandiego game released in 2009.

Carmen Sandiego Adventures in Math

This is a series of games released in 2011/2012 for the Wii [7]

Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego's Luggage

This is a Carmen Sandiego game that was based on the game shows and video games, and "was used as part of a classroom-based customer service training course at Scandinavian Airways Systems (SAS)".[8][9] Games and Learning writes: "The corporate sector...embraced game-based learning early on with games like Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego’s Luggage?, a customer service training tool".[10] The date of release is unknown.

Carmen Sandiego Returns

This title was released in 2015 on iOS and Windows.

Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? The Trivia Game

In 2019, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt licensed Carmen Sandiego to Global Eagle for them to make a trivia game to be played on airlines.[11]

Carmen Sandiego handheld

In late 2019, Basic Fun released an interactive handheld version of Carmen Sandiego.[12]

Carmen Sandiego: To Steal Or Not To Steal

The interactive animated film was released on Netflix in 2020. It involves Carmen Sandiego saving Ivy and Zack when V.I.L.E. captures them during a heist in Shanghai.[13]

Gameloft edition

Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? is a game in the Carmen Sandiego franchise released by Gameloft around 2008–2009.[14] This game sees the titular thief Carmen Sandiego and her VILE gang steal jewels from museums around the world and to try to find out the famous confession of Leonardo da Vinci's brother Ruperta.[15] The player's goal is to stop Carmen and capture her thieves. Starting as an inexperienced rookie, the player's first quest is to retrieve the Napoleon bowl that was stolen from the Louvre museum in Paris and apprehend the thief.[15] It is then revealed that the bowl has spaces for 8 jewels, and it is the players' task to find these treasures.[15] The game is an arcade game combined with an adventure game, consisting of twelve increasingly difficult cases to solve.[15]

Each investigation sends the player to various cities around the world. Their task is to interrogate witnesses, find out what the perpetrator looks like (three clues are required to obtain an arrest warrant), and obtain clues about their whereabouts.[15] Players have seven days to solve each case. The player chooses the next destination on a map: if they choose incorrectly they lose time.[15]

As the player gains experience, they gain access to two useful gadgets - the almanac (which contains detailed information about the city) and a scanner (which helps to find clues in the city).[15] The game includes 3 mini-games: "World Chase" - selecting the capital of a given country, "Flag Quiz" - recognizing the flag of a given country, and "Face Match" - remembering then indicating facial features.[15]

Browser games

Where on the Web is Carmen Sandiego?

On September 1, 1999, Internet solutions firm Rare Medium created a Carmen Sandiego website for The Learning Company which included a "Where on the Web is Carmen Sandiego?" game that took kids through educational links.[16][17][18][19]

"Where on the Web Is Carmen Sandiego? was a free online adventure for grades 4-8. The game built reading comprehension and critical thinking skills. Student teams completed one cross-curricular mission per week during the six-week challenge. Teams could save their progress for later completion. Every class that completed four of six missions would have a chance to win a new computer loaded with The Learning Company educational software. The program began in February 2000.[20][21] The synopsis says: "As special agents of the ACME Detective Agency, kids will embark on missions to track down the devious Carmen Sandiego and her cohorts, collecting clues and learning about the world (and the Internet) to solve the case".[22] The project was design directed by Eric Wood.[23]

Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? (Facebook)

In 2011, a Facebook version of Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? was released.

Where on Google Earth is Carmen Sandiego?

In 2019, Google partnered with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt to develop a series of Carmen Sandiego capers that utilized Google Earth as the world map, the first released in March, but was otherwise playing out similar to the original 1985 video game.[24]

Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? (1985) - Internet Archive

In 2014, the Internet Archive began hosting an embedded DOSBox emulator running a copy of the original Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? (1985 video game).

Unofficial games

Where in Hell Is Carmen Santiago?

The opening screen of the game

Where in Hell Is Carmen Santiago? is a 1990 game developed by St. John M. Morrison, which has players hunt down Carmen in the afterlife. Broderbund never recognized this as a part of the series.[25][26] It has the status of "a Copyrighted FreeWare".[27] The title screen started with the word "Heck", which was rubbed off and replaced with "HELL".[25] The creator of the game had never played a Carmen Sandiego game, but was very familiar of the franchise due to its constant appearance in gaming magazines. He crafted a first person adventure game based on this premise and copied the naming scheme of the titles.[28][27]

The beginning of the plot is as follows: "You are a famous crimebuster hot on the trail of that world-renowned thief, Carmen Santiago (sic), and her latest gang. The rumors that she had died in a bizarre accident don't deter you; after all, it might just be misdirection. So you track her to the Dark Woods of I/O Error, where you encounter three hideous beasts and lose your way in the night".[27]

In Where in Hell is Carmen Santiago?, the players need to use detective skills and knowledge of facts from Canticle One of Dante's Commedia: Inferno.[27] Players have 140 turns to be successful, and can do the following commands per turn: move up, move down, view map, inventory, call a name, use an item, look around, search for items, save, restart, quit, and sound off.[25]

Sandiego Inc.

Sandiego Inc. is an app in the same vein as the Carmen Sandiego series.[29][30] AndroidGuys wrote the title "preys on people's nostalgia for the Carmen Sandiego series".[31]

Homages and cultural references

  • The 1991 video game The Treehouse featured the Carmen Sandiego theme as a song to play on its keyboard minigame.
  • The acapella group The Vineyard Sound covered the original theme "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?" on their 1995 album Part Deux.
  • The acapella group Techiya parodied the original theme "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?" on their 2010 album Techiya Sunrise.
  • The band The Relay Company's 2010 album X features the song "Marco Polo", which mentions Carmen Sandiego by name in the chorus.
  • MC Lars' 2016 album Donald Trump Has Really Bad Morals features the song "Carmen Sandiego Has Really Bad Morals".
  • The band Flying Coach's 2018 EP "The Flying Five Family Funtime" features the song "Carmen Sandiego".
  • The band Being Beta's 2018 album Read More Books features the song "Where in My Life is Carmen Sandiego".
  • The band Grizfolk's 2019 album Rarest of Birds features the song "Carmen Sandiego".
  • Tatiana Hazel's 2020 album Duality features the song "Carmen Sandiego".
  • The 2021 video game Chinatown Detective Agency is heavily inspired by the Carmen Sandiego series, particularly the user interface of Where in the World? Deluxe.[32]

See also

References

  1. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. "Carmen Sandiego Returns: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Launches Character's First-Ever IOS App" (Press release). Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  2. Barry, David (October 1983). "Profiles: The Carlston Trio". Antic. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  3. Craddock, David (September 15, 2017). "The Making Of Carmen Sandiego". Kotaku. Retrieved September 15, 2017.
  4. Jancer, Matt (October 15, 2019). "How a Generation Became Obsessed With Tracking Down Carmen Sandiego". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
  5. "Download Where in Europe is Carmen Sandiego | Abandonia".
  6. "Download Where in Americas Past is Carmen Sandiego | Abandonia".
  7. "Carmen Sandiego Adventures in Math: The Lady Liberty Larceny Related Games - GameSpot.com". October 2, 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-10-02.
  8. Schrage, Michael. "Bye-Bye Blackboards". Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  9. Prensky, Marc (2000). "EXCERPTS FROM DIGITAL GAME-BASED LEARNING". Archived from the original on March 22, 2013. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  10. "The Real State of Learning Game Funding". www.gamesandlearning.org. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  11. "Global Eagle Deal will See Passengers Look for Carmen Sandiego In-Flight". APEX | Airline Passenger Experience. 2019-04-15. Retrieved 2019-05-01.
  12. "Brandgenuity inks licensing deals for Carmen Sandiego". Retrieved 2019-08-24.
  13. "Carmen Sandiego: To Steal Or Not To Steal (2020) - IMDb". IMDb. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  14. Picciano, Anthony G.; Spring, Joel (2013-05-07). The Great American Education-Industrial Complex: Ideology, Technology, and Profit. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-32230-3.
  15. "Cellna recenzja: Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego". Komórkomania.pl (in Polish). 21 August 2009. Retrieved 2020-10-25.
  16. "Carmen Sandiego | ACME Academy for Educators". Archived from the original on 1999-11-27.
  17. "Rare Medium". Brandweek, vol. 40, no. 25, 21 June 1999, p. 30.
  18. "Iq News: Bits". June 21, 1999. Retrieved 2022-03-28.
  19. "Macintosh Garden Manuals 2021 B C" (PDF). archive.org. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  20. "WEB SITES". Childhood Education, vol. 76, no. 3, spring 2000, p. 160.
  21. Felix, Kathie. "Netwatch". Multimedia Schools, vol. 7, no. 1, Jan. 2000, p. 14
  22. "Rare Medium Inc. Partners With The Learning Company to Develop Carmen Sandiego Web Site". PR Newswire, 17 June 1999,
  23. https://www.linkedin.com/in/ericrbwood/details/experience/
  24. Lee, Dami (March 12, 2019). "Now you can try to catch Carmen Sandiego in Google Earth". The Verge. Retrieved March 13, 2019.
  25. "Where in North Dakota is Carmen Sandiego? Game Review". YouTube. 6 February 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12.
  26. "Please Register This Shareware". tumblr.com.
  27. "All About the WHCS.SHK". Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  28. "Games that predate popularizers". proboards.com.
  29. Arici, Alexandra (2018-04-23). "Sandiego Inc. review - a very simplistic and not very challenging detective game". AndroidGuys. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
  30. "Sandiego Inc. Review - Why in the world was this game made? - FNGR GNS". FNGR GNS. 2018-02-26. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
  31. Arici, Alexandra (2018-04-23). "Sandiego Inc. review - a very simplistic and not very challenging detective game". AndroidGuys. Retrieved 2018-05-05.
  32. "Inspiration: The Thief in Red". General Interactive Co. 2019-03-08. Retrieved 2021-04-28.
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