Hi! I'm Bart Bonte, a Belgian independent game designer and bontegames.com is where I blog about new interesting browser and mobile games. My own games are all in the left column (or at the bottom of this page on mobile). More info about me and my games on bartbonte.com.
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April 25, 2009
racoon kettle
Minoto's weekly point and click treat has arrived: racoon kettle.
So the text at the end means kind of the same thing as this:
"The tanuki [raccoon] returns to the poor man with another idea. The man would set up a 'roadside attraction' (a little circus-like setup) and charge admission for people to see a teapot walking a tightrope. The plan works, and each gains something good from the other--the man is no longer poor and the tanuki has a new friend and home."
"Made it big" actually is supposed to mean what it means in English ;-)
Great, i love this games <3
ReplyDelete-xxx-
p.s i'm number 1 (H)
LoL, i love these small games.
ReplyDeleteBravo!!
Racoon end...
ReplyDeletethat wa a very odd game
ReplyDeleteHaha XD I love minato games. That crazy racoon kettle... The 'transformation tool' leaf was weird...
ReplyDeleteRacoon End
ReplyDeleteawww haha all Minoto games are so odd and so cute :D
ReplyDeleteTwo Clicks and the game is over!
ReplyDeleteIs this a game?
weak
"The show was done by the appearance
ReplyDeleteof the teakettle for the boy
who had helped.
It made it big,
and both became happy."
EY???!!
Lol!!
This one seems to be based on Bunbuku Chagama:
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunbuku_chagama
So the text at the end means kind of the same thing as this:
ReplyDelete"The tanuki [raccoon] returns to the poor man with another idea. The man would set up a 'roadside attraction' (a little circus-like setup) and charge admission for people to see a teapot walking a tightrope. The plan works, and each gains something good from the other--the man is no longer poor and the tanuki has a new friend and home."
"Made it big" actually is supposed to mean what it means in English ;-)
Ahhh, the Japanese tale that Raccoons are one of the three masters of transformation.
ReplyDelete