Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Rocky's Boots

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
8.6
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Initial release date
  
1982

Mode
  
Single-player video game


Genre
  
Educational game

Publishers
  
The Learning Company, IBM

Rocky's Boots wwwmyabandonwarecommediascreenshotsrrockysb

Platforms
  
Apple II, DOS, Commodore 64, TRS-80 Color Computer, IBM Personal Computer, IBM PCjr

Developers
  
Warren Robinett, Leslie Grimm

Similar
  
The Learning Company games, Educational games

Rocky s boots gameplay pc game 1982


Rocky's Boots is an educational logic puzzle game by Warren Robinett and Leslie Grimm, published by The Learning Company in 1982. It was released for the Apple II, the CoCo, the Commodore 64 the IBM PC and the IBM PCjr. It was followed by a more difficult sequel, Robot Odyssey. It won Software of the Year awards from Learning Magazine (1983), Parent's Choice magazine (1983), and Infoworld magazine (1982, runner-up), and received the Gold Award (for selling 100,000 copies) from the Software Publishers Association. It was one of the first educational software products for personal computers to successfully use an interactive graphical simulation as a learning environment.

Contents

Rocky's Boots Rocky39s Boots

Gameplay

Rocky's Boots Download Rocky39s Boots My Abandonware

The object of the beginning part of Rocky's Boots is to use a mechanical boot to kick a series of objects (purple or green squares, diamonds, circles, or crosses) off a conveyor belt; each object will score some number of points, possibly negative. To ensure that the boot only kicks the positive objects, the player must connect a series of logic gates to the boot.

Rocky's Boots Rocky39s Boots for the Apple II YouTube

The player is represented by an orange square, and picks up devices (the boot, logic gates, clackers, etc.) by moving their square over them and hitting the joystick button. When the boot has kicked all of the positive objects and none of the negative objects (obtaining a score of 24 points), Rocky (a raccoon) will appear and do a beeping dance.

Rocky's Boots Download Rockys Boots Abandonia

Later, the player finds that he can use all of the game's objects, including AND gates, OR gates, NOT gates, and flip-flops, in an open-ended area to design his own logic circuits and "games." This is why many do not actually consider this as a game, but more of a visual design engine. The colors of orange and white were used to show the binary logic states of 1 and 0. As the circuits operated, the signals could be seen slowly propagating through the circuits, as if the electricity was liquid orange fire flowing through transparent pipes.

Reception

Rocky's Boots GB64COM C64 Games Database Music Emulation Frontends Reviews

II Computing listed Rocky's Boots ninth on the magazine's list of top Apple II education software as of late 1985, based on sales and market-share data. Computer Gaming World called Rocky's Boots "outstanding". The review complimented the game's appeal to both children and adults, and its ability to teach Boolean functions in a non-threatening way. InfoWorld commented positively on the game combining play with educational value and conveying circuit design and Boolean logic to children.

Similar games

Rocky's Boots Download Rockys Boots Abandonia

The engine for the game was used in several other games by The Learning Company, including the sequel Robot Odyssey, and a still later game called Gertrude's Secrets. The distinctive style of the game was modeled after Robinett's earlier Atari 2600 game Adventure, to which Rocky's Boots was originally going to be a sequel.

Rocky's Boots

References

Rocky's Boots Wikipedia