With guns and bullets, the players hunt the wild animals to keep them as food. The learning trajectory of the game is straightforward, but the critical part is hunting. The player takes the role of a wagon leader who leads a group from Independence, Missouri, to the Oregon Willamette Valley. The original game was made to teach the eighth graders about 19th-century life on the Oregon Trail. When one of your party members dies, a funeral is briefly held, at which you may write a suitable tombstone epitaph, and after which you continue down the trail.Īt the conclusion of the journey, points are awarded according to a formula weighted by the profession chosen (points are doubled for a carpenter and tripled for a farmer), the number and health of surviving family members, remaining possessions, and cash on hand.It is an educational computer game released in 1974 by Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium. Your oxen were also subject to illness and death. People could also die from drowning or a broken leg. Throughout the course of the game, members of your party could fall ill and die from a variety of causes, such as measles, snakebite, dysentery, typhoid, cholera, and exhaustion. For example, hunting during winter would result in graphics showing grass covered in snow. Also in the later version, you could hunt in different environments. Some would consider this a realistic representation of the wild west. It was extremely common for players to kill several thousand pounds worth of animals, only to waste the large majority of it.
In later versions, as long as there were at least two living members of the wagon party, 200 pounds could be carried back to the wagon. While the amount of wild game shot during a hunting excursion is limited by only the player's supply of bullets, the maximum amount that can be carried back to the wagon is 100 pounds in early versions of the game. Deer (eastern section) and elk (western section) were in the middle in terms of speed, size, and food yield bear were between bison and deer in all three properties. Bison were the slowest moving targets and yielded the most food, while rabbits and squirrels were fast and offered very small amounts of food. In later versions, players hunted with a crosshair controlled by the mouse. Later, players would control a little man who was capable of pointing a rifle in eight directions and firing single shots at animals. In the original version, there were no graphics and players were timed on how fast they could type "BANG," "WHAM," or "POW," with misspelled words resulting in a failed hunt.
Using guns and bullets purchased over the course of the game, players select the hunt option and hunt wild animals to add to their food reserves.
The game has been released in many editions since the original release by various developers and publishers who have acquired rights to the game.Īn important aspect of the game was the ability to hunt. The player assumes the role of a wagon leader guiding his party of settlers from Independence, Missouri, to Oregon's Willamette Valley over the Oregon Trail via a Conestoga wagon in 1848. The original game was designed to teach school children about the realities of 19th century pioneer life on the Oregon Trail. The Oregon Trail is a computer game originally developed by Don Rawitsch, Bill Heinemann, and Paul Dillenberger in 1971 and produced by MECC in 1974.