
The 19 versions use a Windows 95-styled pause menu which added an options screen but got rid of the setting for subtitles. The 1994 version uses a Windows 3.1-styled pause menu. 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. The 1994 version used a more generic font for the credits, sort of similar to the subtitle font used in the DOS games. The 1998 version changes this.Īdditionally, all the item cursors were colorized in the 2007 version. 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.

Starting from this game onward, cursors are included that are made to indicate the option to go somewhere off in the distance. The 2007 version had its title screen adjusted to use the shortened title. The copyright dates were updated accordingly. 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. Can you find the location of the kelp treasure before the mafia does? 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. Released in EU: 1994 (NL), 1997 (SE original), 2001 (NO), 2006 (SE rerelease)įreddi 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.

Publishers: Humongous Entertainment (US),

Freddi Fish and the Case of the Missing Kelp Seeds
