Jump Start Adventures 3rd Grade: Mystery Mountain

A game in the JumpStart series of Edutainment Games.

The plot is somewhat weird. An Uncle Pennybags/Omnidisciplinary Scientist character named Professor Spark for some reason lives in a Raygun Gothic Elaborate Underground Base built inside the mountain of the subtitle. His daughter Polly is a Royal Brat who may be best described as a Diabolical Mastermind version of Veruca Salt. One day, while the Professor is out, Polly fails a history quiz at school and decides the solution is to use Daddy's Time Machine to alter history, thus making her quiz answers correct. With the help of Botley, a Robot Buddy who serves as Polly's Badly-Battered Babysitter, you, the player, have to thwart Polly and Set Right What Once Went Wrong before the Delayed Ripple Effect will (supposedly) set in.

You can see a Walkthrough starting here.

"Polly: I felt faint and short of breath! No one has ever given me a zero before! Botley: That's not quite true, Polly, I remember just two weeks ago... Polly: Be quiet, Plotley, this is my story!"
 * Adaptation Explanation Extrication:
 * Alphabet Soup Cans
 * Alpha Bitch: Subverted. Being rich, blonde, and snotty, Polly has all the usual indicators. However, a throwaway line from Botley indicates Polly is unpopular at her school.
 * Badly-Battered Babysitter: Botley
 * Continue Your Mission, Dammit!: In educational games like this it's expected for the player to be able to take his/her time, but this game ups the counter-method to extremes. Since Botley is characterized as overreactive, he would chide you if you strayed from his mission path. And if you insisted on straying, then Polly herself would chime in and taunt you that you were looking in the wrong place. But the messages Botley gave for idling too long nearly turned this into Guilt Based Gaming, ranging from "You're hesitating, is something wrong?" to "Of all the times to freeze on me! WE'RE SOOO CLOSE!" and "Pull yourself together, man! Are you having second thoughts about helping me save the world?" At its worst, he calmly informed you "Look, it's nothing personal, but if you're not up to this, I can always go back to the schoolhouse and find someone else". It comes as a real shocker when your robotic exposition fairy admits to the player he believes he or she is probably broken, but that likely would be the case if you idled so often, probably because the player was too busy listening to the background music to listen to him.
 * Delayed Ripple Effect
 * Deus Exit Machina: Polly's father is out and he's apparently the only one who can keep her under control.
 * Difficulty Levels
 * Disembodied Eyebrows: Polly's eyebrows float above her head, which is just as well since you can't see her eyes. Botley's eyebrows also float.
 * Enfant Terrible: Polly.
 * Excellent Adventure
 * Exposition Fairy: Botley.
 * Fridge Logic: Why doesn't Polly just go back in time and give herself the answers before the quiz rather than going to all the trouble of changing history?
 * Fridge Brilliance: Because that would create a Grandfather Paradox. If she gave herself the answers and she passed, she would never have gone back in time to give herself the answers. Or she just didn't think of that.
 * There's also the matter that Polly failed the test, not because she really didn't know the answers, but was bored enough to purposely answer the questions wrong as a joke, only to get mad when she predictably fails due to her teacher not understanding the "joke" of getting the entire test wrong, thus is what caused her to rewrite history to fit those questions to undo something she did to herself for failed lulz.
 * The End of the World as We Know It
 * Fetch Quest: 4 items per robot to answer specific questions to where Polly sent a specific robot. Since there are 25 robots, you'll need 100 items.
 * Insecurity System: The security procedure to open the front door of Mystery Mountain is... literally a game of "Simon". Yeah, brilliant move, Professor Spark -- that'll keep out potential thieves and nosy reporters for sure. Okay, Gameplay and Story Segregation.
 * Missing Mom: The absence of Polly's mother is never explained.
 * My Name Is Not Durwood: Polly's manner of addressing Botley.
 * Noodle Incident:
 * Noodle Incident:


 * Plot Coupon: The 25 robot. To get those, you need 4 items to answer the "Who, What, When and Where?" regarding Polly's test questions. In short you'll need 100 items.
 * Pop Up Video Games
 * Prolonged Prologue: Mostly, it's Botley and Polly going on and on with exposition, with some points needlessly repeated and little to no user interaction. It was edited down in later releases, though this resulted in the Adaptation Explanation Extrication mentioned above. Also, some Backstory information was cut, for anyone who cares about that.
 * Pungeon Master: Botley is the host of many an Incredibly Lame Pun.
 * Raygun Gothic: The whole aesthetic of the game's universe. This includes Polly's school, which for some reason is an Art Deco version of an old-fashioned, one-room schoolhouse.
 * Robot Kid: Botley.
 * Sinister Surveillance: Polly spends all of the game lounging in a room with monitors which display every room in Mystery Mountain. She communicates with you and Botley through various monitors around the Mountain, never meeting you personally -- kind of like Khan.
 * Temporal Paradox
 * Villain Ball: Polly hides clues throughout the mansion that you need in order to stop her and even sometimes explains what you need to do to find them.
 * Well, it's no fun if you can't combat her, she's a kid, she's probably having more fun screwing with Botley than anything else.
 * Warp Whistle: The report card in the inventory will take the user to any game in the Mansion.