

Dabble using an "electrochemical math magnet" to steal all the world's math. However, the storyline is different this time. note Both games end their credits by thanking the developers of the other game, so. Math Blaster: Pre-Algebra (1997) - A remake of The Great Brain Robbery, set in the canon established by Reading Blaster: Ages 9-12, with which it was apparently developed in conjunction.It also does a lot of Worldbuilding, much of it cleverly integrated into the reading comprehension activities. This game is something of a Continuity Reboot, since it completely ignores The Great Brain Robbery, but shares its canon with the next two games, more or less. Dabble has kidnapped six of Bizzaroville's most prominent citizens, and Rave has to rescue them. Plus, the whole "mystery" theme carries over, albeit with a Halloweentown vibe added. Although the characters and story are new, the four educational mini-games are clearly derived from the four mini-games that were included in the 1989 game. In a certain sense, this is a remake of the 1989 game. Dabble has stolen the brain of a math genius, and it's up to you, as Rave, to recover it from Dabble's creepy mansion. Math Blaster Mystery: The Great Brain Robbery (1994) - This is where the series really gets started, with Rave and Dr.Instead, the main character is an unnamed man who looks like Sherlock Holmes, and there is no storyline linking the mini-games together. It includes four pre-algebra puzzles, which are presented with a vague "mystery" theme. Math Blaster Mystery (1989) - The initial entry in the series, sorta.Games in the Blaster Mystery series include: Dabble's Revenge, wherein the Blaster Pals fought against Dr. While generally unrelated to the original universe, there was a readable crossover story featured in Reading Blaster 2000 titled Dr.
#Dabble tv skin#
Dabble, although he does have blue skin at least. Most of the inhabitants of this world appear to be monsters and/or creatures of some description, with the odd exception of Dr. Dudley Dabble, a Mad Scientist who lives in a Haunted House. Trading the "space" theme for a "spooky" theme, they focus on Rave, a little green creature with a yellow horn growing out of his head, as he battles Dr.

These games take place in a different universe from that of the Blaster Pals. Blaster Mystery later expanded into covering language arts for the same age group. While the original Math Blaster teaches basic arithmetic to elementary-aged children, Math Blaster Mystery teaches pre-algebra to somewhat older kids.
#Dabble tv full#
The scariest part is that it's full of word problems.The Blaster Mystery series is a kind of Spin-Off to the larger Blaster series of Edutainment Games.
