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・ The Ordinary Radicals
・ The Ordinary Women
・ The Oregon Channel
・ The Oregon Desert
・ The Oregon Duck
・ The Oregon Encyclopedia
・ The Oregon Experiment
・ The Oregon Journal
・ The Oregon Trail (1923 serial)
・ The Oregon Trail (1936 film)
・ The Oregon Trail (1939 serial)
・ The Oregon Trail (1959 film)
・ The Oregon Trail (2009 video game)
・ The Oregon Trail (2011 video game)
・ The Oregon Trail (TV series)
The Oregon Trail (video game)
・ The Oregon Trail 3rd Edition
・ The Oregon Trail 4th Edition
・ The Oregon Trail 5th Edition
・ The Oregonian
・ The Oregonian (film)
・ The Oregonian Building
・ The Oregonian Printing Press Park
・ The Orenda
・ The Oresteia in the arts and popular culture
・ The Organ
・ The Organ (newspaper)
・ The Organ (pipe organ magazine)
・ The Organ Pipes (Antarctica)
・ The Organic Herb Trading Company


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The Oregon Trail (video game) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Oregon Trail (video game)

''The Oregon Trail'' is a computer game originally developed by Don Rawitsch, Bill Heinemann, and Paul Dillenberger in 1971 and produced by the Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium (MECC) in 1974. The original game was designed to teach school children about the realities of 19th century pioneer life on the Oregon Trail. The player assumes the role of a wagon leader guiding his or her party of settlers from Independence, Missouri, to Oregon's Willamette Valley on the Oregon Trail via a covered wagon in 1848. The game is the first entry in the Oregon Trail series of games, and has since been released in many editions by various developers and publishers who have acquired rights to it, as well as inspiring a number of spinoffs (such as ''The Yukon Trail'' and ''The Amazon Trail'') and the parody ''The Organ Trail''.
''The Oregon Trail'' was extremely successful, selling over 65 million copies, after ten iterations over forty years. It was included in the book ''1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die''. It was a hallmark in elementary schools worldwide from the mid-1980s to mid-2000s, as school computers came bundled with the game
==History==
In 1971 Don Rawitsch, a senior at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, taught an 8th grade history class as a student teacher. He used HP Time-Shared BASIC running on an HP 2100 minicomputer to write a computer program to help teach the subject. Rawitsch recruited two friends and fellow student teachers, Paul Dillenberger and Bill Heinemann, to help.
''The Oregon Trail'' debuted to Rawitsch's class on December 3, 1971. Despite bugs, the game was immediately popular, and he made it available to others on Minneapolis Public Schools' time-sharing service. When the next semester ended, Rawitsch deleted the program, but he printed out a copy of the source code.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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