Revision as of 16:03, 17 May 2024 edit2603:3005:2400:e500:98fa:1421:566d:17a7 (talk) →Characters← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:15, 17 May 2024 edit undo2603:3005:2400:e500:98fa:1421:566d:17a7 (talk) →DiscontinuationNext edit → | ||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
Microsoft discontinued the dolls in 2000 and lost the patent rights to the toys five years later. | Microsoft discontinued the dolls in 2000 and lost the patent rights to the toys five years later. | ||
However, despite the dolls and technology being discontinued in 2000, Teletubbies episodes were ActiMates-compatible up until 2001, the toys still interacted with reruns of their respective shows (from ActiMates-compatible years) during that time for a few more years, and Arthur and D.W. could still interact with Arthur VHS releases from 2000-2005 (releases that feature episodes from seasons 1-4). ActiMates Barney could also interact with airings of seasons 4-6 of Barney & Friends on PBS Kids Sprout. | However, despite the dolls and technology being discontinued in 2000, ''Teletubbies'' episodes were ActiMates-compatible up until 2001, the toys still interacted with reruns of their respective shows (from ActiMates-compatible years) during that time for a few more years, and Arthur and D.W. could still interact with ''Arthur'' VHS releases from 2000-2005 (releases that feature episodes from seasons 1-4). ActiMates Barney could also interact with airings of seasons 4-6 of ''Barney & Friends'' on PBS Kids Sprout. | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 16:15, 17 May 2024
Series of interactive toys released by Microsoft KidsThis article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "ActiMates" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
ActiMates are a discontinued series of interactive toys released by Microsoft Kids in September 1997. The toys are in the form of licensed dolls which can interact with episodes of their respective television series from 1997-2000 or on special ActiMates-compatible VHS tapes and computer games. The toys were marketed as educational tools and gave positive affirmations for correct answers from the user.
Characters
Microsoft released seven characters based on their three respective television series: Barney in 1997, Arthur, with his sister D.W. from the 1996 series in 1998 and the Teletubbies in 1999. Barney was the first to be released, was first displayed at the New York Toy Fair that year and became a success during the holiday season.
Television and computer interaction
The dolls can interact with a television set and computer (the Teletubbies can't interact with the computer) using TV and PC packs. They can also be played standalone without the VCR and computer packs.
Three ActiMates Barney PC games released at launch, with more additional software to be released for Barney.
Discontinuation
Microsoft discontinued the dolls in 2000 and lost the patent rights to the toys five years later.
However, despite the dolls and technology being discontinued in 2000, Teletubbies episodes were ActiMates-compatible up until 2001, the toys still interacted with reruns of their respective shows (from ActiMates-compatible years) during that time for a few more years, and Arthur and D.W. could still interact with Arthur VHS releases from 2000-2005 (releases that feature episodes from seasons 1-4). ActiMates Barney could also interact with airings of seasons 4-6 of Barney & Friends on PBS Kids Sprout.
References
- Microsoft Launches ActiMates Early Learning System At Toy Fair: Unique Realmation Animation Technology Makes Interactive Barney Ideal Learning Partner Archived 23 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ActiMates Arthur and D.W. Join the First Family of Interactivity, Teaching Kids That "Learning is More Fun With a Partner": This brother-sister act is now available, joining "cousin" Barney and bringing more "edutainment" to the neighborhood Archived 12 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine
This computer hardware article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
This article related to Microsoft is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |