Development:Disney's Toontown Online/Toontown Concepts
This is a sub-page of Development:Disney's Toontown Online.
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A design document written by Chuck Ballew, dated April 12, 2000. This document shows a slightly later and more refined look into the game's developmental stages. It can be read here.
Contents
Features
- Jellybeans were originally Simoleons, which were counted in "zillions" after playing minigames. The name was decided on around the release of The Sims in February 2000, which also coincidentally uses the same currency.
- "Hysterical Markers" were gold plaques on buildings that would present a humorous text message and backstory to the Toon when near them. The feature may have been an early form of the building names found on streets and the Knock-knock Joke Doors.
- Cog buildings works just like the final, except that silver plaques would be present on there and it would originally give an idea of how many Suits are present rather than just showing building floors.
- There was originally a feature where Toons could send messages via interactable mailboxes on Streets, which likely was cut in favor of the Whisper feature.
- Shticker Books originally contained a Friend List feature which would be moved to a separate button.
Zone Types
Safe Zones
Playgrounds were originally called Safe Zones at this point of development, and worked much like they do in the final game. Each of them planned to have;
- An Activity Area, described as an "unstructured activity that may involve some simple problem-solving, but without scoring or win-lose scenarios", where it should be something to do while groups can do together or watch each other do while conversing. The gimmick partially made it to the final, mostly in the form of the maze in Daisy Gardens.
- An Arcade Entrance, which is a portal that leads into the "common arcade area". To leave the arcade, the player may choose which Safe Zone they can teleport to. The idea would be finalized as the Trolley Games and eventually the Gag Shop.
- A Store, where they'll need merchandise to fight the Suits, and each one will sell the same items. The idea would make its way into the game's late alpha stages as Goofy's Gag Shop. It mentions that it would be lightly themed to the zone, where it would tie into the Shopkeepers' names being different in each Neighborhood and the shop itself having variations in wallpaper.
Danger Zones
Danger Zones, which are "many twisting streets", would be Streets in the final and have elements such as:
- Landmarks, that are structured after the Neighborhood's theme and are "above average in geometric complexity". Each of them would have "Hysterical Markers", where clicking on it would open up a small piece of text describing the building's hysterical origins, noting that the literature it would appeal to "girl players in a boy-heavy environment". The feature would be simplified to humorous building names and eventually Knock-Knock Doors in the final.
- Suit Satellite offices work the same as the final; Suits go into the building and it instantly becomes one of their four types. It was mentioned that the Suits would be "hidden" inside and the size of the room will depend on the number of them, than being separated into floors. The Hysterial Marker there would become a "Corporate Identity Plaque", where clicking on it would give a description of it's use in the Suit hierarchy and an idea of how many Suits are located inside. The final has the humorous building name marked as "Inc." and the floors show how many Cogs are inside.
- Toon Facades work the same as the final, but Suit Facades have the "same texture" despite having several different textures. It also mentions that the streetlights and trees would be converted to suit structures, but the element never really came to be in the final even though there are leftovers for it.
Neighborhoods
A total of 15 neighborhoods were originally planned, each of them having a street and an important gimmick specific to them.
Toontown Central
It was originally called Downtown Toontown in development, and was planned to be separated into different districts amidst the large size. A lot of features were planned for the Playground but were cut for time or technical limitations;
- Toon Hall was originally bigger and had multiple rooms. There was originally a Toon Services place where the player can take a photo of their avatar for use in their Shticker book, and an option to retire your toon and start over. The starting over option was put into the Pick a Toon menu.
- A long, corridor called the Hall of Fame containing experienced Toons in potraits was planned, where clicking on them would show the stats of the things they have accomplished. It was reworked into the Toon Platoon system found in the Toon Headquarters.
- A scrapped Mayor's Office location would have been for Toons that have accomplished an immense task, where the player could talk with Mickey Mouse ran by a server administrator rather than a pre-defined set of phrases.
- Another removed location and feature was the Zoning Office where it included a large map of Toontown with locations of each and every one of the Suits.
A second part called North Toon Square was considered as an additional location, with some more features;
- There was originally a Toontown News location which showed newsletters of three different themes. The feature would have been reworked as Toon News...for the Amused!
- The Carltoon Ritz hotel was considered as a location for toons since the beginning of development.
- A tutorial and combat practice area called "Goofy's "How-to" Cartoon Academy" was planned, showing gameplay basics of fighting against Suits.
- Toons could originally have their look changed at Ludwig Von Drake's Spastic Surgery Center, which was scrapped entirely and wasn't brought back in the game's life.
Minigame Hub
Hub World
In the game's early development stages, there was never a Trolley and an arcade-based minigame hub was originally considered. Four different styles were originally decided before being ultimately reworked;
- A video arcade which would either be called "Goofy's Games", "Hewey, Duey and Louie's Tooncade" and "The Mickey Mouse Club" would have contained a diverse selection of arcade machines and separate rooms with activities like chess.
- A carnival tent called "Clarabelle's Carnival", "Mickey Midway" or "Goofy's Games" was also planned which would have contained carnival-styled games like ring toss, shooting gallery or darts.
- A third option in the form of a Magic Portal would transport the Toon to an area drastically different from the place of Toontown they're in was also a plausible option. Pleasure Island from the animated Disney adaptation of Pinocchio was the first option where Toons would play minigames with a slightly edgier style and would potentially get donkey ears when entering the area. Another option was Sorcerer Mickey's where the entrance would be shaped like his trademark hat he wore in Fantasia, and the minigames would have a magic theme to them.
- A casino area, optionally called "Scrooge McDuck's Lucky Duck Casino" was considered to be a satirical depiction of Las Vegas or with focus on the negative connotations on a casino. Games "of chance and skill" like Poker, Blackjack and Go Fish were also considered, but was the least respected idea due to the games' respective gambling nature. If the idea had happened, it may have caused a higher age rating.
It's also worth noting that a bus was part of the idea, which may have been a loose inspiration for the Trolley.
Minigames
Minigames were originally planned to be based on old Disney cartoons, nearly all of them having a unique theme. Almost All of the minigames concepts never made it into the final game;
- 3 Little Pigs: The players have to help Practical Pig build a house in time, where The Big Bad Wolf blows down the other houses. If the house isn't built in time, the player loses, but if it is built in time, they win and they dance around singing "Who's Afraid of the Big Bald Wolf?".
- Pluto's Secret Stash: Pluto digs up his bones in the backyard and the player has to memorize where he buried them, and dig them up in the right order.
- Chip & Dale's Tree House: The player has to gather all the acorns before Donald Duck takes them all.
- The Tortoise and the Hare: A racing game where the player picks either a Tortoise or a Hare with their own advantages/disadvantages; Tortoises move slowly but are easy to control while Hares move in sudden bursts of speed but will go down the wrong paths if not controlled properly. The sentence mentions that up to ten can race, but only four Toons can participate in a minigame in the final.
- Ferdinand's Flower Fury: In a field of flowers, the players must gather five flowers to pacify Ferdinand as he dashes all over the garden or if they get hit they'll lose all the flowers they've collected.
- Casey at the Bat: A baseball game where players must take turns to not strike out.
- Huey, Dewey & Louie's Tricycle Race: A racing game where you control one of these characters and race a track around their house.
- The Old Mill: A game where the player has to get past the mill's vanes blowing wildly in the storm to the front door, where the first one who makes it wins.
- Minnie's Bake-off: The players must gather specific ingredients for the bowl and work together against Minnie Mouse, where she is fast in the minigame.
Miscellaneous
Famous Toons
Primary Citizens should be seen as "walk-around characters", that are associated with specific neighborhoods, while Secondary Citizens are described as those that "might appear in graphics or text, but not as walk-around characters". It is worth noting that many more Disney characters, mostly from old cartoons, Silly Symphonies and Ducktales were planned to appear in the game, but many of them would not make it to the final. The ones the list that were ticked would end up getting their own neighborhoods.
- Primary Citizens;
✓Mickey Mouse | Scrooge McDuck |
✓Pluto | Clarabelle Cow |
✓Minnie Mouse | Horace Horsecollar |
✓Goofy | Pegleg Pete |
✓Donald Duck | J. Aubudon Woodlore |
Daisy Duck | Baby Herman |
Huey, Dewey & Louie | Peter & Polly Penguin |
- Secondary Citizens:
Chip & Dale | Gus Goose |
Fifi (Minnie's Dog) | Figaro the Cat |
Oswald The Rabbit | Butch the Bulldog |
Julius the Cat | Lucifer the Alley Cat |
The Three Little Pigs | Marblehead the Pelican |
The Big Bald Wolf | Snapshot II-Racehorse |
The Three Caballeros | Rover Boy-Racehorse |
Toby Tortoise | Granpa(sic) Duck |
Max Hare | Webbigail Vanderquack |
Mortimer Mouse | Mrs. Beakley |
Mudoon The Cop | Duckworth |
Ferdinand The Bull | Launchpad McQuack |
Casey (At the bat) | Fenton Crackshell |
Humpfrey The Bear | Gyro Gearloose |
Abner & Monty Mouse | Flintheart Glomgold |
Willie The Whale | The Beagle Boys |
Little Toot the Tugboat | Ludwig Von Drake |
Steamboat Willie | Mrs. Featherby |
Suzie the Blue Coupe | Flowers and Trees • |
Hortense the Ostrich | Peter Pig |
Ferdinand the Bull | Ferdy and Morty Mouse |
- Strangely, Daisy Duck was not ticked despite getting her own Neighborhood, but she didn't physically appear at launch.
- Scrooge McDuck and Gyro Gearloose were not ticked either, but he would be used as a plot point in the Flash intro of the game's earlier versions.
- Chip 'n' Dale would eventually get their own neighborhood in 2008, as Chip 'n' Dale's Acorn Acres, as walk-around characters.