Toonstruck is a point and click adventure game released in 1996. It follows the story of animator Drew Blanc who is inexplicably sucked a cartoon world of his creation. The game's story arc centres around Drew's escape with the help of a small purple character called Flux Wildly.
After ten years in the corporate mangler, cartoonist Drew Blanc (Christopher Lloyd) is worn out and frustrated at being unable to pursue his own creative vision for an animated television series. So much so, he almost misses an important morning meeting with his boss, Sam Schultz (Ben Stein), due to his perpetual state of lamentation.
Schultz makes it painfully clear that the only reason Blanc has remained hired is thanks to the success of his nauseating cute cartoon, "The Fluffy Fluffy Bun Bun Show" and asks him as Bun Bun's original creator to revitalized the show. Naturally, playing his part as the cold, corporate shill, Schultz's suggestion is to add more bunnies, much to Blanc's dismay, calling it Fluffy and Friends.
"Go make." Schmaltz demands, adding that the new characters must be on his desk by the very next morning.
Blanc stares at the sketchpad in front of him for hours with no signs of progress and begins to reminisce about his naive ambitions as a young cartoonist to make a show starring his favorite creation, a purple sun glasses wearing blob named Flux Wildly. Turning back to his sketch pad, uttering the mantra, "must focus on bunnies", he falls asleep amidst a lightning storm and jarred awake by his television playing The Fluffy Fluffy Bun Bun Show at four o'clock in the morning.
Just as he goes to turn it off with the remote, he is suddenly sucked into the show and ultimately into Cutopia, a cartoon world of his own creation.
Met with a rainbow assortment of parading rabbits, Blanc attempts to wake himself for fear of missing his deadline when he is interrupted by a series of lightning bolts that turn the surround green and pleasant hillside into a barren, rocky wasteland. Blanc is then saved from being struck himself by Flux who pushes him clear of the final blast.
After a brief warm exchange, Blanc pleads for help to get home. Flux (voiced by Simpsons star Dan Castellaneta) assures him that despite not being able to find his own way home, much less one out of the cartoon world, he would take him to someone who would be able to help him: the benevolent ruler of Cutopia, King Hugh.
The king (voiced by David Ogden Stiers) agrees, on one condition: that Blanc and Flux help them to defeat Count Nefarious (voiced by Tim Curry), ruler of neighboring territory, the Malevolands. The king informs the duo that the Count perfected a device known as the Malevolator, a beam weapon that turns everything that is cute and nice into that which is cruel and sinister.
As it turns out, the solution is a fairly simple one: replace key components of the Malevolator and their heinous influence with their opposites in order to create a cutifiier to reverse the damage done to Cutopia. However, obtaining the new parts will not be a simple task for Blanc and Flux as they must navigate Cutopia, Zanydu, the Malevolands and their crazy inhabitants.
Toonstuck is a point of click adventure title typical of the era in which players must interact with and explore environments to find clues and object to complete often abstract puzzles to progress the story.
Toonstruck's most notable feature was in its visual design: protagonist, Drew Blanc is not only played and voiced by actor Christopher Lloyd but his digitized self is used as the character sprite, while all other characters are cartoons.
Due to the financial failure of the original game, the publisher refused to release Toonstruck 2 even though the developers had already developed a large part of the game.
In summer 2010, Keith Arem, the game's musical director who currently owns the right to Toonstruck 2, stated that he is planning to release a full version of Toonstruck which would be adapted for modern PC's and include the second half of the game. But since he needs "tremendous fan support" to justify its release and get funding, there is a petition for the release of Toonstruck 2 (along with a Facebook group, Twitter and a Livejournal community).
Later, in November 2010, Mr. Arem announced on the Toonstruck 2 Facebook page that he's going to release some "behind the scenes peeks into the development process" in the next months.
| Classical and Production Music Used in Toonstruck | (Cont.) |
|---|---|
| Tracks listed in order of composer: Baker, Steve
Barak, Zdenek
Beaham-Powell, Nigel and Russell, Bella
Beaver, Jack
Bennet, Brian Laurence
Bulla, Stephen
Coles, Jack
Connor, Bill
Crooke, Sindey
Devereaux, John
Duncan, Trevor
Farnon, David
Farran, W. Merrick
Fiddy, John Charles
Fonteyn, Sam
| Hall, Andrew
Hanner, Ronald
Harvey, Richard
Hingley, Barrie
Johnson, Laurie
Longmire, John
Maloney, Paddy
Mendelssohn-Barthodldy
Perry, Alan
Preskett, Graham
Race, Steve
Richardson, Clive
Rossini, Gioacchino
Stephens, Len
Tchaikovsky, Peter
Trede, Gerhard
Walter, Dick Stephen
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| Game Name | Toonstruck |
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| Original US Release |
Nov. 4, 1996
need a fuzzy date? |
| Original US Release | know the real date? |
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| ESRB |
ESRB: T
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