Strong Bad and his gang of misfit friends in the Homestar Runner universe never had to make sense to be funny, as the myriad Flash cartoons and first episode of his video game resolutely prove. Developer Telltale Games, the studio responsible for the episodic Sam & Max releases on PC and holders of the Wallace and Gromit videogame license, is getting ready to bring out the next installment of the five episode Strong Bad first season, entitled Strong Badia the Free. It very loosely picks up where the first episode left off, pitting the odd, crass, and infrequently sensible Strong Bad against the King of Town.
From Gamertell:
"Telltale Inc. today (February 11, 2010) confirmed during the Macworld 2010 expo that it will, indeed, be releasing games for Mac.
Even better, the releases begin today (February 11, 2010) with Tales of Monkey Island."
Games can also vote on the next Telltale series style game to be release in March for Mac.
Gamertell is reporting that it has reliable information that Telltale may be planning on releasing its entire library of games for Mac.
The company's current titles are available for Windows and some are also available for Wii and/or Xbox 360.
"Telltale’s current lineup includes the Sam & Max series Tales of Monkey Island, Strong Bad’s Cool Game for Attractive People, Bone and Wallace and Gromit’s Grand Adventures..."
It will only be interesting when NEW games are going to be developed for the Mac.
In 2004, Kevin Bruner and Dan Connors founded Telltale, Inc. with a new perspective on gaming. With years of experience working on grand scale projects akin to "blockbuster movies," Bruner and Connors created Telltale to establish a more nimble, faster-paced, digitally-distributed episodic game model comparable to television production. Five years later-with over one million episodes sold-Telltale is celebrating with an eye toward an even brighter future.