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Freddi Fish and the Case of the Missing Kelp Seeds
Freddi Fish and the Case of the Missing Kelp Seeds |
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Developer: Humongous Entertainment This game has unused graphics. This game has a prototype article This game has a prerelease article |
Freddi Fish and the Case of the Missing Kelp Seeds is Humongous' first Freddi Fish title, notable for being their first game made specifically for Windows. The game puts you in the "shoes" of Freddi Fish and her annoying little green sidekick Luther as they look for Grandma Grouper's missing kelp treasure, which is apparently the only source of food in the entire ocean. Can you find the location of the kelp treasure before the mafia does?
Contents
Sub-Pages
Prototype Info |
Prerelease Info |
Unused Subtitles
Like other Humongous Entertainment games, Freddi Fish has subtitles for all dialogue. In the first print run in 1994 (the one with the Windows 3.1-styled pause menu), these were used and could be activated by pausing the game and checking the "Display text" box. However, on every release after, they need entering TextOn=1 to the game's entry in the hegames.ini file, or through ScummVM.
Unused Click Points
Skeleton
In Mr. Starfish's room, there is an unused clickpoint involving a hanging skeleton of a fish. While the graphic exists in the room, the game covers it up, leaving an out-of-place cutout on the rocks. It also has three animations, one of which involves interaction with the jack-in-the-box head above it. The clickpoint can be run with ScummVM's debugger by force running scr 227 in the 1994 version and scr 229 in the 1998 version.
Interestingly, the skeleton is present on the load/save graphics for this room, and it still showed up on a few pre-release screenshots, making it likely that this was a last-minute change.
Sunken Ship Sword
On the deck of the sunken ship (room 48 in the 1994 version and room 49 in the 1998 version), there is a sword that normally only plays an animation of a turtle sliding down it when it is clicked on; however, there are two more animations stored in the game's data for it though of the handle coming to life. These can be enabled by entering EnableFishBradSword=1 in hegames.ini. If you want to allow these animations to play more than once, you can also add PeteIsAlsoTheOverlord=1. There is no known reason why these were cut.
Unused Music
File | Notes |
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Nearly identical to another track used in the game, except it features tiki-esque chanting throughout the entire piece. Possibly unused because there was no place it would fit, or maybe due to issues with islander stereotypes. This can actually be found on The Fat Man's album "Flabby Rode" as Bongo #2/W Fat Chats (Unused). | |
Intended for the king's castle, evidenced by being both in the same style as the piece that actually plays there and from being right next to it in the HE4 file. The most likely reason it's unused is because of how the game engine handles music—there is a "playlist" of the sorts always running known as the "standard songs," and a "preferred song" can be selected that will override the standard list. Unlike most other HE games, this one gradually adds background music to the list as the game is played; there can only be one list at a time, so changing the list would clear the standard list and lead to problems. As such, these two pieces would end up going unused due to programming limitations. The first track is called Dixie Door (King Crab's Court Alternate) and the second track is called Grooved Dixie. | |
A tune intended for the sunken ship, evidenced for the same reasons as the castle pieces. This one goes unused due to the used one being designated as "preferred" in the programming. The explanation for the first king's castle piece would apply here...except once you make it to the sunken ship, you are "locked" in that area to the end of the game, and the standard background music is not used from there on out, so clearing the list would have no effect. Maybe it was done as a fallback? This track is called Dark Harp (Sunken Ship Alternate). | |
A little excerpt of one of the other themes in the game, however this one has lyrics "Freddi we need your help please, we need to find the missing kelp seeds, Freddi we need your help, we need to find the missing kelp" added to it. It probably lacked a good place to be used in the game. This track is called We Need Your Help w/Vocals (Credits Alternate). | |
The sharks theme in its entirety. Usually, only the first 30 seconds of this tune are heard before it gets cut off, leaving a good minute unheard. This track is called Stupid Fish (Boss and Spongehead). |
Additionally, the save/load music is played through the sound effects channel, but a duplicate version also exists on the music channel for some odd reason. All of these unused tracks were released on Bandcamp; the soundtracks for this game and others in the series was released on October 9, 2020 and split across two volumes.
Hidden Cutscene
A disturbing insight into Freddi's mind can be viewed by adding EddieEatsLuther=1 to hegames.ini or scummvm.ini and clicking on Luther when with Eddie (see video at right for the result). This scene was animated by Tom Verre, supposedly as a way to blow off steam, though it's interesting that time was taken to record lines for Luther and Freddi just for this cutscene. They were even translated across international releases.
This scene can be viewed multiple times in one playthrough by also having BretIsTheOverlord=1 (named after Bret Barrett) in the configuration file.
Regional Differences
The 2001 Norwegian dub of the game colorized the item cursors and made movement animations skippable, which would not happen anywhere else until nearly six years later (see below for details).
Revisional Differences
To do: Obtain a copy of the 2007 version and get screenshots, and see if there are any differences missed here. |
The game has three known major versions: the initial version made in 1994, a re-issue made in 1998, and a 2007 re-release that changed the subtitle to Kelp Seed Mystery.
1994 | 1998 |
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The 1994 version used the generic "Humongous Entertainment Presents..." logo without any sound. The 1998 re-issue used their newer logo with the signature drum roll crash. The 2007 version reverted to the 1994-style with an orange logo sans sound.
The Junior Adventure logo was added to the 1998 version, using the light-blue variant that was typically used in the other Freddi Fish games. The 2007 version excludes this.
1994 | 1998 |
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The copyright dates were updated accordingly. The 2007 version had its title screen adjusted to use the shortened title.
1994 | 1998 |
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Starting from this game onward, cursors are included that are made to indicate the option to go somewhere off in the distance. In the 1994 version, these particular cursors are very long and thin as opposed to the short and thick ones every Humongous game made afterward would adopt. The 1998 version changes this.
Additionally, all the item cursors were colorized in the 2007 version.
1994 | 1998 |
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The 1994 version used a more generic font for the credits, sort of similar to the subtitle font used in the DOS games. From the second game onward, a more stylized cartoonish font was adopted for each credit sequence, and was retroactively added back in for the credits of the 1998 version.
1994 | 1998 |
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The 1994 version uses a Windows 3.1-styled pause menu. The 1998 and 2007 versions use a Windows 95-styled pause menu which added an options screen but got rid of the setting for subtitles.
Other Differences
- The 1994 version had a bug that prevented the music from playing on the jellyfish tossing minigame unless you turned the music off and back on. The 1998 version corrected this.
- At the volcano, in the 1994 version, when throwing a purple sea urchin into the bucket, the cursor would disappear for a brief moment then reappear after the urchin landed into the bucket, allowing you to throw more in before Freddi finished talking. In the 1998 version, the cursor remains off the screen until after Freddi says her line.
- The 2007 version made it possible to skip movement cutscenes that occur when going from screen to screen. This was not possible in the earlier versions.
The Freddi Fish series
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Windows/Mac OS Classic | The Missing Kelp Seeds (Prototype) • The Haunted Schoolhouse • The Stolen Conch Shell • The Hogfish Rustlers of Briny Gulch • The Creature of Coral Cove Maze Madness • Water Worries |
- Pages missing developer references
- Games developed by Humongous Entertainment
- Pages missing publisher references
- Games published by Humongous Entertainment
- Games published by Ravensburger Interactive
- Games published by Levande Böcker
- Games published by Russobit
- Games published by Nordic Softsales
- Windows games
- Mac OS Classic games
- Pages missing date references
- Games released in 1994
- Games with unused graphics
- Games with unused cinematics
- Games with unused music
- Games with unused text
- Games with regional differences
- Games with revisional differences
- To do
- Freddi Fish series
Cleanup > Pages missing date references
Cleanup > Pages missing developer references
Cleanup > Pages missing publisher references
Cleanup > To do
Games > Games by content > Games with regional differences
Games > Games by content > Games with revisional differences
Games > Games by content > Games with unused cinematics
Games > Games by content > Games with unused graphics
Games > Games by content > Games with unused music
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Games > Games by developer > Games developed by Atari, SA > Games developed by Infogrames > Games developed by Humongous Entertainment
Games > Games by platform > Mac OS Classic games
Games > Games by platform > Windows games
Games > Games by publisher > Games published by Atari, SA > Games published by Infogrames > Games published by Humongous Entertainment
Games > Games by publisher > Games published by Levande Böcker
Games > Games by publisher > Games published by Nordic Softsales
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Games > Games by publisher > Games published by Russobit
Games > Games by release date > Games released in 1994
Games > Games by series > Freddi Fish series