Le Louvre: The Palace & Its Paintings | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Montparnasse Multimedia |
Publisher(s) | BMG Interactive |
Platform(s) | Windows, Macintosh |
Release | 1995 |
Genre(s) | Educational |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Le Louvre: The Palace & Its Paintings is a 1995 art game developed by Montparnasse Multimedia and published by BMG Interactive.
Le Louvre: The Palace & Its Paintings was developed by Montparnasse Multimedia, a company founded in 1992. [1] The game was received six months after the founding of BMG Interactive Entertainment as an "interactive leisure" subsidiary of Bertelsmann. [2] The game cost 1.3 million francs to make, and by February 1996 BMG had reported profits. [3] It was one game in a series by BMG, including Musee D´Orsay, Michelangelo, Inuit. [4]
The title offers an interactive multimedia exploration of the Louvre collection.
Entertainment Weekly praised the game's achievements despite its graphical limitations, deeming it "thoughtful — and less taxing" than a trip to Paris. [5] People magazine thought the game wouldn't offer new insights to art lovers, but had the potential to inspire non-art lovers to take a trip to the Louvre. [6] Billboard felt the title was the "grandaddy" of the art-based game genre, and praised the developer's choice to narrow down the collection to 100 items to prevent the feeling of overwhelm. [7] Newsweek deemed it "satisfying". [8]
The game sold 15,000 copies by February 1996, [3] and by January 1997 it had sold more than 300,000 copies. [9] The game ultimately sold over 1 million copies worldwide by 2000. [1]
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