Microsoft Home


Microsoft Home is a discontinued line of software applications and personal hardware products published by Microsoft. The Microsoft Home brand was first announced by Bill Gates in a presentation on October 4, 1993. These applications were designed to bring multimedia to Microsoft Windows and Macintosh personal computers. With more than 60 products available under the Microsoft Home brand by 1994, the company's push into the consumer market took off. Microsoft Plus!, an add-on enhancement package for Windows, continued until the Windows XP era. The range of home software catered for many different consumer interests from gaming with Microsoft Arcade and Entertainment Packs to reference titles such as Microsoft Encarta, Bookshelf and Cinemania. Shortly after the release of Microsoft Windows 95, the company began to reduce the price of Microsoft Home products and by the rise of the World Wide Web by 1998, Microsoft began to phase out the line of software.

Titles

Microsoft Home produced software for all different home uses and environments. The products are divided into five categories: Reference & Exploration, Entertainment, Kids, Home Productivity and Sounds, and Sights & Gear. The category in which the product was divided is identifiable by the packaging. Generally, Reference & Exploration products have a purple base color, Entertainment has a black base color, Kids has a yellow base color, Home Productivity has a green color and Sounds, Sights & Gear products have a grey or red base color. Note that many applications were developed in conjunction with other software and reference companies. For example, Microsoft Musical Instruments was developed with Dorling Kindersley.

Entertainment

In the early 1990s, games on personal computers generally ran on the now obsolete MS-DOS operating system. However, with the introduction of Microsoft Windows 3.1x in 1992, Microsoft Home published several entertainment applications that implemented the new technologies of Microsoft Windows such as DirectX. Furthermore, these applications encouraged the computer gamers of the time to migrate from MS-DOS to Microsoft Windows. This transition permitted better use of computer graphics, revolutionized game programming and resulted in a more realistic gaming experience, compared to DOS gaming. For example, Microsoft Windows Entertainment Pack Games have remained a classic for computer gamers, ever since their development in the early 1990s.
NameYear of ReleaseRetail Price when New
Microsoft Fury31995
Microsoft Hellbender 1996-
Microsoft Deadly Tide 1996
History of [Microsoft Flight Simulator|Microsoft Flight Simulator]1982, 1993-2006US$49.95/CAD$64.95
Scenery Enhancements for Microsoft Flight Simulator Version 5.0:
  • Microsoft Caribbean
  • Microsoft Hawaii
  • Microsoft Japan
  • Microsoft Paris
  • Microsoft New York
1995US$34.95/CAD$49.95
Microsoft Golf1993-2001US$49.95/CAD$69.95
Microsoft Golf Championship Courses:
  • Mauna Kea Championship Course
  • Banff Springs Championship Course
  • Pinehurst Championship Course
  • 1993US$24.95/CAD$34.95
    Microsoft Space Simulator1995US$49.95/CAD$64.95
    Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack1995US$24.95/CAD$34.95
    Microsoft Arcade1993US$34.95/CAD$44.95
    Microsoft Return of Arcade1996
    Microsoft Revenge of Arcade1998
    Microsoft Pinball Arcade1998

    Kids

    [Image:Microsoftkids.JPG|thumb|225px|right|Microsoft Kids logo]
    The Microsoft Kids division produced educational software aimed at children in 1993. Their products feature a purple-skinned character named McZee who wears wacky attire and leads children through the fictional town of Imaginopolis, where each building or room is a unique interface to a different part of the software. He is accompanied by a different partner in each software title.
    Tying in with the TV series, Microsoft Scholastic's The Magic School Bus was a highly successful series that continued to be sold after Microsoft Home's kids range of software turned into a subsidiary called Microsoft Kids.
    NameYear of ReleaseRetail Price when New
    Microsoft Scholastic's The Magic School Bus:
    1994-2000US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft Gahan Wilson's The Ultimate Haunted House 1993US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft Creative Writer and Creative Writer 2.1993US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft Fine Artist 1993US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Ghostwriter Mysteries for Creative Writer1995US$19.95/CAD$29.95
    P.J.'s Reading Adventures 1995US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft 3D Movie Maker 1995US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker 1996US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft Explorapedia:
  • The World of People
  • The World of Nature
  • 1995US$49.95/CAD$69.95
    Microsoft Plus! for Kids 1995US$24.95
    My Personal Tutor 1997US$54.95
    ActiMates Toy characters and software titles based on Barney & Friends, Arthur, and Teletubbies1997US$64.95 for TV Pack and PC Pack, US$34.95 for software titles.

    Sights, Sounds & Gear

    NameYear of ReleaseRetail Price when New
    Microsoft Scenes screensaver and wallpaper program
    • Sierra Club Wildlife Collection
    • Sierra Club Nature Collection
    • Undersea Collection
    • Sports Extremes Collection
    • Personal Collection
    • Outer Space Collection
    • Flight Collection
    • Hollywood Collection
    • Brain Twister Collection
    • Stereogram Collection
    • Impressionist Collection
    1994US$24.95/CAD$34.95
    Microsoft Natural Keyboard1994US$99.95/CAD$129.95
    Microsoft Mouse1993US$64.95/CAD$84.95
    Microsoft Windows Sound System Version 2.01995US$59.95/CAD$84.95
    Microsoft Home Mouse1995US$44.95/CAD$59.95
    Microsoft SoundBits
  • Microsoft SoundBits - Hanna-Barbera
  • Microsoft SoundBits - Hollywood
  • Microsoft SoundBits - Musical Instruments
  • 1992–1994US$24.95/CAD$34.95

    Legacy

    Current products

    Discontinued products