Color a Dinosaur

Moby ID: 10784
Note: We may earn an affiliate commission on purchases made via eBay or Amazon links (prices updated 4/24 12:21 PM )

Description

Color a Dinosaur is an electronic coloring book designed for kids ages 3 to 6. The game provides 16 different dinosaurs which can be colored in with a variety of colors and patterns. There are two coloring modes available: free form mode where you control a pencil and select the region to be colored, or automatic mode where the computer selects a region and you only have to select a color.

Groups +

Screenshots

Credits (NES version)

13 People

Game Design and Concept
Programmed By
Executive Producer
Producer
Art By
Music
Sound
Game Tested By
Written By
Edited By
Coloring Book Illustrations

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 12% (based on 3 ratings)

Players

Average score: 0.7 out of 5 (based on 9 ratings with 1 reviews)

A boring and repetitive educational game

The Good
There are not many things to say for a coloring book video game like this one. This game was developed for younger audiences and produced by Dr. Stephen Clarke-Wilson.

The game is as simple as you can think, you choose your colors and patterns and you start painting the uncolored dinosaurs. You've got many colours but you can use all of them at the same time. You can only choose the colors from a palette (there are eight of them), and each palette has two different main colors, and the rest are just a combination of them.

There are many different dinosaurs to paint, and many of them has more things to be painted like flowers, the sun or clouds, which is something really good.

The Bad
The game doesn't need animations or anything, it's an interactive game for younger audiences, so, we can't ask too much because it's just educational.

Sound's bad, we've got only music when we're selecting our dinosaur to be painted and in the main tittle screen. No music during the painting (during the game), just a complete silence.

You've got two modes for painting. You can paint it by moving your cursor all around the screen by yourself (a free moving system) or moving your cursor automatically to every part of the dinosaur. If you use the first mode, there are some tiny parts of the dinosaur that requires precision or you'll ruin all your painting (and we don't have an analogical controller). Anyway I think that the first one is much better than the second one.

There are only two colors in each palette, so, you can't paint dinosaurs with many different colours, just two of them and their combinations. What's more, some palettes (four of them) are psychedelic, and the colours never works fine on the painting, so, we have a few combinations and nothing more...

The Bottom Line
Play this game as a four years old child and try it. The only question that you should think about is "Would I buy it for my children?" And my answer is an emphatic "No".

NES · by NeoJ (398) · 2009

Analytics

MobyPro Early Access

Upgrade to MobyPro to view research rankings!

Related Games

Dinosaur
Released 1983 on TRS-80
Dinosaur
Released 1990 on PC-88, 1991 on PC-98, FM Towns
Dinosaur
Released 1983 on TRS-80
Disney's Dinosaur
Released 2000 on Game Boy Color
Dinosaur King
Released 2008 on Nintendo DS
Dinosaur Forest
Released 2016 on Linux, Windows, Macintosh
Dinosaur Safari
Released 1994 on Windows 3.x, Macintosh
Dinosaur Hunt
Released 2015 on Windows, Linux, Macintosh
Dinosaur Zookeeper
Released 2011 on Browser

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 10784
  • [ Please login / register to view all identifiers ]

Contribute

Are you familiar with this game? Help document and preserve this entry in video game history! If your contribution is approved, you will earn points and be credited as a contributor.

Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Servo.

Game added October 26, 2003. Last modified September 1, 2023.