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  • Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And this thing right here is The Oregon

  • Trail, or rather a new iteration of it for 2018. And it's being sold at a suggested

  • price of $25 US dollars. This is a dedicated electronic handheld unit based

  • on the classic edutainment game that was made most famous on the Apple II in the

  • mid-1980s However as fondly remembered as that version is that is not exactly

  • what you're getting here. In fact what you get is a little bit more advanced

  • than I expected, more on that in a moment. But yeah for now just look at this thing, man!

  • I'm always fascinated by dedicated handhelds,

  • I loved getting those Tiger electronics things back in the day even though they

  • pretty much all sucked. But this is thankfully a lot better than that. But

  • somewhat annoyingly it is exclusive to Target stores in the USA, at least as I'm

  • recording this video. And no this is not sponsored, they didn't send it to me or

  • anything, I didn't get it for free. I just saw it on the shelf and bought it

  • because it looked cool. It turns out Target is no stranger to selling

  • exclusive Oregon Trail products, they also released this Oregon Trail card

  • game a year or two ago by Pressman. Similar packaging but it's just a card

  • game. I'm not huge into card games but I picked it up anyway because I like

  • Oregon Trail products. Anyway this electronic version is manufactured by

  • Basic Fun which is a division of The Bridge Direct. I've never owned anything

  • of theirs but I have seen some of them hanging around various shops. Especially

  • these miniature arcade machines, those were kind of impressive I thought. But yeah this is the

  • first one of their thingies that I have picked up and you know what? I'm just

  • ready to get inside of this thing because I mean just look! "Set out on the

  • trek from Independence, Missouri to Oregon's Willamette Valley!" Ah, many fond

  • memories of playing Oregon Trail games over the years, so let's jump into the

  • box and see what you get inside. Yeah there's little twisty things, just

  • twist off of there and now there you go. You got one of those little pull tabs to

  • get the included batteries doing their thing and to get the store demo mode

  • disabled. And say hello to The Oregon Trail unit itself! A rather compact

  • little thing about the size of a Game Boy Color, definitely a good bit thicker

  • than that though. And to me it actually looks a

  • a little bit like a Macintosh, like an earlier compact Mac. Anyway down here you

  • have some controls which are, well... they don't feel great let's put it that way.

  • Cheap, gummy, plasticky things with a rather bizarre d-pad here. You have these

  • diagonals and cardinal directions then these other keys for enter, the wagon

  • for the menu, got the sound on and off and a yes or no button for different

  • questions in game. And you also get a little black and white fold out

  • instruction manual which pretty much just tells you to play the game. But if

  • you've played practically any Oregon Trail iteration over the past

  • 30-something years then you'll be right at home because this really is a classic

  • iteration that has been redone to fit in this handheld form. Press the power

  • button and it powers on and yep, you get a backlit two-and-a-half inch LCD screen.

  • It's quite sharp, very readable. This is what I was impressed with, I was

  • not expecting this to look this "nice," relatively speaking. Yeah, sorry about the

  • dust and like, scratches. A lot of that is underneath the plastic when I got it.

  • I tried to clean it up as much as I could but you know. Anyway here you go, this is

  • The Oregon Trail! And it is the classic game, really. I've covered this

  • before on LGR many years ago, but the gist of the gameplay is you're a person,

  • or a family really or group of people, that are trying to get from the east coast to

  • the west coast of the United States in the mid-1800s. And there are different

  • difficulty levels depending on who you choose to be from the start. So the

  • banker has the most money and the carpenter is kind of in the middle and

  • the farmer's like "nyeh." You can name your leader and four members of your party

  • which is always an opportunity to have some fun with the naming. And before

  • setting off on your trek you have to buy some equipment and supplies. And you'll

  • need to buy, at minimum, some oxen to pull you along. And then you have the option

  • to get as much food, clothing, ammunition, and spare parts as you want and/or need.

  • And there you go, you're ready to start! "Good luck! You have a long and difficult

  • journey ahead of you."

  • *chiptune Yankee Doodle plays*

  • So yeah you not only get a full-color screen but a pretty decent little sound

  • chip that plays chip tunes and PCM sounds! It doesn't have a headphone out

  • jack so I couldn't get a direct recording but yeah, it sounds pretty

  • darned acceptable for this tiny little thing. This is a conversion of sorts

  • of one of the classic versions of the game, and if I had to guess it seems to be

  • based on the 1989/1990 MS-DOS version of the game, at least judging by these

  • graphics. It's not identical obviously, they've modified it a bit to be on this

  • tiny little screen. But it's definitely not the Apple II version, I mean, compared

  • to that it just doesn't look anything like it. I'm assuming though that they just

  • made their own version for this specific type of hardware because it's not a

  • direct emulation of any version of the game that I've ever played or seen. It's

  • just kind of a mishmash of a few different things. Anyway at this point it

  • really is just The Oregon Trail: you're going around trying not to die,

  • attempting to ford rivers and failing spectacularly, and running into all kinds

  • of problems like heat and broken arms and of course cholera and the infamous

  • dysentery. And every so often you get a nice little screen with some nice little

  • music that plays and lets you know where you are on your trek across the United States.

  • *nice little chiptune plays*

  • And as gummy, and imprecise, kind of clunky feeling as that

  • directional pad is for up, down, left, and right, it's fine for the menus. I never

  • had any problem navigating and pressing enter. It's, again, a bit gummy but it's fine.

  • This is not like a quick reaction type of game, you're really just navigating

  • menus for the most part. And for that it is perfectly adequate. However one of the

  • key parts of The Oregon Trail is the hunting minigame and this is a bit of a

  • different story as far as controls go. You still have your cardinal directions

  • but you also have to use those diagonal keys that are around the directional

  • diamond. It made hunting way more difficult than it needed to be and the

  • animals move just as fast as they would on other versions of the game from what

  • I could tell, so they didn't seem to make any concessions for this slightly

  • awkward control scheme. I was just wasting ammo left and right. Yeah that is

  • a little disappointing, I don't know why they couldn't have put a little tiny

  • joystick on there or a more traditional directional pad. Oh well it's completely

  • playable though and I was able to get through the entire game without dying.

  • Well I mean, a whole lot of my people died, I think I might have been the only

  • one left by the end, but hey! I made it and that is all that matters. Look at all

  • the other people that have played who haven't actually played because I'm the

  • only one to have played this unit. Unfortunately I didn't run across any

  • ""peperony and chease" on the trail so I guess this is not based on that

  • particular version that was distributed back in the day. But I didn't expect it

  • to because as I said I believe this is a custom version that is mixing together

  • different aspects of different Oregon Trail releases. I don't know about you

  • but I was kind of curious to get inside of this thing and see what was going on.

  • Check out these craptastic batteries that it came with it, I do not trust these

  • at all. They felt like they have the weight of toothpicks, they were just

  • cheap and pathetic. But hey at least it came with them. So getting the unit open

  • is thankfully very simple: you just have four Phillips head screws, one in each

  • corner, and there you go -- it pops right open. And there's not much going on

  • inside as you might expect for a handheld that costs $24.99. And as

  • expected this little PCB right here you got this epoxy resin crap that's

  • covering up the chips. So I don't know exactly what they are and I'm not gonna

  • try to peel that off there. But if you see the board right there, it's a little

  • bit of a different layout, but it has the same number as

  • others that I've seen in certain videos: E156176. The video

  • I'm specifically thinking of is this one by The 8-bit Guy that he did on the

  • company's other mini tabletop arcades. The board is very similar, in fact it has

  • that same number on there and everything, but the layout is a little bit different.

  • So yeah I guess they're just sort of repurposing these electronics for

  • whatever they need to over in China, which is pretty darned interesting to me.

  • I don't know the specifics of it, maybe somebody else can figure out if it is

  • like a Famicom clone NES on a chip type of thing, I don't know man.

  • So what you end up with is a standalone version of The Oregon Trail that plays a

  • lot like what you remember, but is a new thing in a new form factor. And it's just

  • dedicated Oregon Trail on the go! I like this idea, I don't know about you, and I

  • have a feeling these are gonna start becoming collectibles. Maybe they already

  • are, so if you can I recommend picking one of them up if you're interested in a

  • little handheld Oregon Trail. And I'm also really curious if anybody's gonna

  • be able to like, hack these things to do something else. I'd be down for a

  • portable Super Solvers Spellbound, just throwing that out there. Carmen Sandiego

  • something like that? Yeah man bring on the portable edutainment machines! Anyway,

  • that is it for this episode of LGR and I hope that you enjoyed checking out this

  • little thingy. And if you did, well, stick around. I do more videos every Monday and

  • Friday and occasionally I'll cover something like this that strikes my

  • fancy even though it's a little bit different than what I normally do. But

  • that's okay, I hope. And as always thank you very much for watching!

Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And this thing right here is The Oregon

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