Some line art was worked on by Gerald Broas, who used a 2B pencil to hand draw the backgrounds and characters on 12 field animation paper. For the later games, Dianda was made Lead Artist. For some of the games at this time, the art was provided by Chester Aldridge's company US Equity Holdings. For the games made in the late 1990s, the characters and backgrounds were worked on by Fred Dianda, starting as sketches then refined, colored and animated on computer. By 1997, the characters were redesigned for Reader Rabbit Toddler by Tracy Reynolds of Class 6 Entertainment. In the mid-1990s, artist Frank Cirocco drew the characters and foregrounds in pencil, hiring Mick Gray to ink the line art. In the early 1990s, artist Shaowei Liu hand painted backgrounds and animations which were then digitized for the games. Other hot-spots can trigger an interaction with a character, item, song or mini-game. Visually, the game consists of a series of static screens which the player can navigate through by clicking on certain "travel" hot-spots. These puzzles were originally reading-based challenges but different titles focus on other subject areas. Generally, the series consists of point-and-click adventure games where the player must use their inventory and interact with characters to solve a series of puzzles.
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