Carmen Sandiego/Trivia: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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** In ''Great Chase Through Time'', Ludwig van Beethoven is voiced by [[Super Mario Bros.|Charles Martinet]].
** In ''Great Chase Through Time'', Ludwig van Beethoven is voiced by [[Super Mario Bros.|Charles Martinet]].
** Cole from ''Secret of the Stolen Drums'' is voiced by Kevin Miller. Apparently Cole was [[Sly Cooper|a thief himself]] in a previous life.
** Cole from ''Secret of the Stolen Drums'' is voiced by Kevin Miller. Apparently Cole was [[Sly Cooper|a thief himself]] in a previous life.
* [[History Marches On]]: When ''Where in Time/Great Chase'' was released, the manual states Mona the model in the [[Leonardo da Vinci]] mission was a fictional character and the inspiration for the painting, let alone whether or not Leonardo actually used a model for the creation of the ''Mona Lisa'', was (at the time) unknown. In 2005, it was discovered that the ''Mona Lisa'' depicts Lisa del Giocondo, meaning the game was actually right to depict her as a real person. Of course, the depiction of her as a surly model posing for Leonardo is still completely fanciful, especially considering he spent years working on it.
* [[No Export for You]]: There was a Nintendo DS game named ''[http://www.gamefaqs.com/ds/958481-where-in-the-world-is-carmen-sandiego-mystery-at Mais où se cache Carmen Sandiego? Mystère au bout du monde]''<ref>Translation: ''Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? Mystery at the End of the World</ref>. It was released in Europe and Australia in 2009, and even though the [[Media Classifications|ESRB]] [http://nukoda.com/news/carmen-sandiego-coming-to-ds/ had rated the game (and subsequently yanked said rating when it got accidentally leaked)], it never got an American release. Considering the reviews the game got, though, it may have been a blessing in disguise.
* [[No Export for You]]: There was a Nintendo DS game named ''[http://www.gamefaqs.com/ds/958481-where-in-the-world-is-carmen-sandiego-mystery-at Mais où se cache Carmen Sandiego? Mystère au bout du monde]''<ref>Translation: ''Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? Mystery at the End of the World</ref>. It was released in Europe and Australia in 2009, and even though the [[Media Classifications|ESRB]] [http://nukoda.com/news/carmen-sandiego-coming-to-ds/ had rated the game (and subsequently yanked said rating when it got accidentally leaked)], it never got an American release. Considering the reviews the game got, though, it may have been a blessing in disguise.



Revision as of 14:57, 26 August 2014


  • Executive Meddling: The spin-off series like Word Detective and Math Detective only really took off when a complex series of transactions brought Carmen Sandiego to a new owner. [1]
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: In the Fox series, Carmen was voiced by Rita Moreno.
    • On the PBS shows, the Chief is the DJ from The Warriors.
    • In Great Chase Through Time, Ludwig van Beethoven is voiced by Charles Martinet.
    • Cole from Secret of the Stolen Drums is voiced by Kevin Miller. Apparently Cole was a thief himself in a previous life.
  • History Marches On: When Where in Time/Great Chase was released, the manual states Mona the model in the Leonardo da Vinci mission was a fictional character and the inspiration for the painting, let alone whether or not Leonardo actually used a model for the creation of the Mona Lisa, was (at the time) unknown. In 2005, it was discovered that the Mona Lisa depicts Lisa del Giocondo, meaning the game was actually right to depict her as a real person. Of course, the depiction of her as a surly model posing for Leonardo is still completely fanciful, especially considering he spent years working on it.
  • No Export for You: There was a Nintendo DS game named Mais où se cache Carmen Sandiego? Mystère au bout du monde[2]. It was released in Europe and Australia in 2009, and even though the ESRB had rated the game (and subsequently yanked said rating when it got accidentally leaked), it never got an American release. Considering the reviews the game got, though, it may have been a blessing in disguise.
  1. So Brøderbund Software (owner of Carmen Sandiego) and Soft Key (a Canadian CD collection manufacturer) were bidding on The Learning Company (which owned MECC, creators of The Oregon Trail). Soft Key won and changed its name to The Learning Company Inc. (the original had no "Inc."). This happened in 1995. In 1998, The Learning Company Inc. acquired Brøderbund. In 1999, Mattel acquired The Learning Company, but they lost money, probably from making too many Carmen Sandiego spin-off titles. Then it was sold again to a new owner...
  2. Translation: Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? Mystery at the End of the World