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OPEN HOUSE

Names: Lenin Veintimilla, Marcos Mero, Luis Villamar, David Zambrano


Date: December 13, 2017
Course: P.310 Teacher: Miss Albania Cadenas
Project: GAMES 90´S Shift: 14:30- 15:30

Presenters:
Lenin Veintimilla
Marcos Mero
David Zambrano

Coordinator: David Zambrano


Activities (TYPE OF PRESENTATIONS, GAMES, Design of the stand:
INTERACTIVE ACTIVITIES, ETC): -We are going to decorate with fomix and
-We are going to play with the virtual reality globes
glasses. - We will deliver souvenirs, key rings and
-Play in the computer Nintendo 64 candies
- Trivia. - We are going to dress up with video game
- Play Yoyo and tazos. shirts

Content:
Presenter 1:
With so much technology, next-generation video game console, computer with webcam,
smartphone and electronic game begin to lose good manners and with them some games of all
the life with which we have spent hours and hours having fun.
So I wanted to rescue some of those traditional games enjoyed by the children of the 90s where
there was no need for technology, WhatsApp, or being connected to social networks for 24
hours a day; enough imagination, a couple of songs and little else to enjoy the little things.
Tazos: The main game was to put a tower and throw a tazo against them, those who turned
around you stayed and turned to take turns until the deck was finished.
Yoyo: It was formed by a disc with a slot where a cord was wound, which you had to raise and
lower alternately; The theory seems easy but if you did not get some practice, there was no
way to do it right.
Hopscotch: Consisted in drawing on the ground eight squares in the form of an airplane with
their corresponding numbers and throw something (a stone, for example) so that it fell into
one of the boxes. Afterwards, the player had to walk to the leg with the board without stepping
on the square in which the stone had fallen, which he had to pick up when he returned to the
starting point.
Marbles: you have to attack an opponent and then enter the ball in a hole or 'guaá ' to get the
victory. The more comrades / enemies you had, the longer it lasted and the more complicated
it made you beat them, which is why we liked it so much.

Presenter 2:
The great successor of the SNES, and Nintendo's fabulous 64-bit console, the N64, since its
launch on June 23, 1996 in Japan and, as always a little later in Europe (March 1, 1997), swept
sales and It was one of the most innovative consoles of the moment. With a control design of
the most original cross shaped especially to take control of the games with three-dimensional
environments, with analog stick or the possibility of transmitting vibrations through the
rumble pak we entered fully into the game and enriching more and more the experience of
playing a video game this way we are going to review the best arcade games of the 90s:
Contra III: The Alien Wars™
Donkey Kong Country™ (anaá lisis de Dokey Kong Country SNES)
EarthBound™
Final Fantasy III
F-ZERO™
Kirby™ Super Star
Kirby’s Dream Course™
The Legend of Zelda™: A Link to the Past™ (Anaá lisis de Zelda A Link to the Past)
Mega Man® X
Secret of Mana (anaá lisis de Secreto of Mana en SNES)
Star Fox™
Star Fox™ 2
Street Fighter® II Turbo: Hyper Fighting
Super Castlevania IV™ (anaá lisis de Super Castlevania IV para SNES)
Star Fox™
Super Ghouls ’n Ghosts®
Super Mario Kart™
Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars™
Super Mario World™ (anaá lisis de Super Mario World para SNES)
Super Metroid™ (anaá lisis de Super Metroid)
Super Punch-Out!!™
Yoshi’s Island™

Presenter 3:
It is a well known fact that every single child in the 90s was obsessed with everything to do
with PlayStation. 90s kids were obsessed firstly with getting their paws on the console itself.
Usually this came in the form of a Christmas present, after a lot of begging of parents and
grandparents. You now had the console, an extra controller for annoying siblings that wanted
to get in on the action, the all important memory card it was now time for the games.
1.Rayman
As far as you were concerned this was on the level of Super Mario, and instead of Bowser you
had to defeat Mr Dark. There was magic, a lot of colours, jangly music and that big bug fly thing
that you could hop onto.
2.Final Fantasy VII
90s kids wanted this game, and it took a fair bit of convincing your parents to even consider it,
because it looked a bit scary to them. Once you got it you played it for several hours at a go, and
identified more with the game characters than your own friends.
3.Tekken 3
Hands down the best fighting game to have existed. You always chose the same character (all
about Heihachi Mishima) and you never really knew the moves, but you adopted the fail safe
method of pressing every single button on the controller in a frenzied manner. Usually worked,
until one of your siblings managed to get some mega move cheat codes and ended your
winning streak.
4.Tony Hawk Pro Skater
After you had mastered the art of the mini skateboard which you controlled with your fingers
and flung dangerously across the classroom, you were ready to move onto bigger and better
things aka this game. For this one you made sure you got the cheat codes so you could max out
those high scores. Surprisingly your parents were fine with you playing this, because it was
safer than actual skateboarding.

5.Crash Bandicot
Thanks to this game you spent the majority of your childhood running away from boulders,
and avoiding anything marked TNT or Nitro. Valuable life lesson that.
6.Spyro the Dragon
All of a sudden Barney was no longer your favourite purple dragon, because you were all about
Spyro who was cooler because he actually breathed fire, rather than giving out hugs and moral
lessons.
7.Rugrats
Search for Reptar Looking back now the graphics were awful, but you were bloody well
determined to get all of these missing jigsaw pieces back. You just wished that Reptar bars
were available in real life.
8.Silent Hill
You always wanted this game, because it looked absolutely terrifying. Every kid in your class
pretended that they had completed it and weren’t terrified of it, but you knew that they were
lying through their teeth.
9.Tomorrow Never Dies
You were sick and tired of anyone who owned a N64 telling you how much fun they were
having with GoldenEye so when this came out for PlayStation you were determined to get in on
the action. You were disappointed.
10.Dino Crisis
The dinosaur fascination was too real for all 90s kids, what with Barney and of course the
Jurassic Park movies. And basically this game let you take part in your very own Jurassic Park
scenario, just with better weapons.
11.WWF War Zone
Before WWE existed it was known as WWF to 90s kids, and it was the ultimate game for any
self-respecting WWF fan. Similar to Tekken 3 you had no idea what the moves were, but
aggressively punched all buttons in the hopes of winning. Decent strategy and somehow
always worked.
12.Toy Story 2
You were a fan of the movies, so naturally the next step was pestering your parents until they
gave in and got you this game. You got to play the role of Buzz and it was unreal how much
pressure you were under to collect all of those pizza planet tokens.
13.Tetris Plus Sometimes
the fancy games got a little too much, and you just wanted to go back to this classic.
14.Tomb Raider
What was the point of owning a PlayStation if you didn’t have this game? It was like having a
cheese sandwich without cheese.

Materials (prizes, posters, audio, etc,):


Laptop
Chair
Smart Phone
Virtual reality glasses
Tazos
Hopscotch
Marbles
Pictures of Games

YOU WILL NEED THIS PAPER SHEET FOR THE NEXT CLASS

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