| Description:
 
 This deliberately paced program takes place in Charlie Brown's world,  where kids dress the same day after day and the only character with attitude is  a beagle. Players who persist through this CD-ROM's slow start will be rewarded  with games and scenarios that emulate what it's like to live in the middle of a  "Peanuts" cartoon. This is a good thing for kids who like the strip and the  handful of "Peanuts" TV specials in existence. But kids who prefer the more  frenetic pace of modern cartoons might find Where's the Blanket, Charlie  Brown? a bit too placid.
   The mental workout this program provides is excellent. More than any other game  manufacturer, Tivola has mastered the art of setting up a problem, then quietly  letting the player figure out how to solve it. Linus's blanket is lost, and  players can either assume the identity of Charlie Brown or Lucy and find it.  Once the problem is presented, players must navigate around Charlie Brown's  house and use their powers of observation to get the game moving. This segment  can make players feel like they're trapped in "Peanuts" purgatory, as they arrow  Charlie Brown from room to room, desperately searching for a means out of the  house and into the rest of the game. The on-disc Help file spells out exactly  where players must look and what they must collect to move on--resist the  temptation to look at the Help file. You will miss the challenge and charm of  this game if you lose patience and cheat.    As the story line leads from Charlie Brown's house to a library to Schroeder's  piano room to a supermarket with many other stops in between, games are  unlocked. The nine games are short, smart endeavors. Some of the standouts  include a game in which Schroeder plays a short melody on his piano, and kids  must click on sequences of actual notes that match the melody. Another great  game requires kids to put poor, scrambled Peppermint Patty back together after  she is magically rearranged by the Great Houndini. This descrambling has some  added twists that push it far beyond typical match-the-parts games. Each of the  nine games has two levels of difficulty, and once they are unlocked, they can be  instantly accessed for repeat play.    On the way to these games are numerous other minigames, opportunities for  problem solving, and goodies you can feed Snoopy to keep his Snoopy meter on  full. Players can play this game in German as well as English. Where's the  Blanket, Charlie Brown? probably won't hold up to a lot of repeat play by  older kids, but the gentle way this program forces players to use their entire  brains to find that darn blanket is remarkable. (Ages 4 to 102 according to the  manufacturer; we say 4 to 8, although hard-core "Peanuts" fans of any age will  also enjoy it.) --Anne Erickson
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