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Technology Stocks : GTIS - Will it be a Phoenix or not ?

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To: Bill Gizzo who wrote (1217)11/30/1997 2:11:00 PM
From: 4-UR-Eyes-Only  Read Replies (1) of 2319
 
Latest article from PC Magazine:(December 16, 1997 )

zdnet.com

What about kids' software? This has been a great year
for new educational and entertainment software.
Humongous added luster to its reputation for the best
kids' software on the planet (Freddi Fish, Putt-Putt,
Pajama Sam) with the first title in its new Spy Fox
series ($30), Big Thinkers for kindergartners and first
graders ($20), and the incredible Backyard Baseball
($30). Backyard has levels of complexity and
intelligence I've simply never seen in kids' software.
Not only do you get many playing fields, lots of game
variety and strategy, and that wonderful Humongous
artwork, you also get a hip, ethnically rich cast of
kids. Someone at Humongous understands the
importance of diversity in our society, and it shows in
Backyard Baseball.

Humongous games consistently offer more fun and
longer playability than other publishers' titles. As a
parent of a 6-year-old computer buff, I can tell you that
springing for $30 to $40 for a package that Graham
absorbs and walks away from after a couple of hours
is immensely frustrating. No one burns out on
Humongous games--especially rich and complex ones
like Spy Fox and Backyard Baseball--in 2 hours. Or
20 hours.
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