Phineas and Ferb D-Cards is a cardmaking game based on Phineas and Ferb, developed by Disney Online UK for the Disney UK website in June 2011. Themed cards are pennable by users and sendable to friends.
Gameplay[]
Visitors can choose multiple topical backgrounds shaped after one of several available series, ubiquitously showcasing the main characters, a prominent scenario strongly related to its core ideas, and an orange Mickey Mouse vintage stamp entwined with a titular logo mark. A font may be picked for the text box afterwards so that they are able to write down the desired message in a personalized manner, prompting the content to be stowed alongside the distinctive cover. Sending over the electronic letter is achieved through the nifty mail service, entering the intended address and agreeing to the posited dispatching regulations.
Background Information[]
- The activity's title is a blend word of the term "e-cards", referring to the common abbreviation for "electronic cards", and the initial "D", standing for Disney.
- For the Phineas and Ferb note, the posting picture employed is a screengrab taken from the show's website animation as it stood during its 2011 phase, featuring Phineas, Ferb, and Perry analyzing screens and blueprints inside their garage workshop whilst happily welcoming the accessing user.
- This online postcard service associated to Disney UK originated in 2007,[2] with more specific franchise themes appearing over the next few years mostly to promote their respective debuts. It was eventually merged into Disney Create in November 2012.[3]
- A hotbar displaying the most ingressed themes was placed along the bottom spot of the homepage, showing a thumbnail and links to the well favored entries. Phineas and Ferb seemed to be consistently seen among these popular selections according to the exhibition lineup.[4]
- Default motifs for the greeting letters comprised the four holiday sceneries of Valentine's Day, summer, Halloween, and Christmas, which consonantly presented generic pictures filled with the most popular Disney cast to represent each celebration. Accompanying the broad props is the normal font for the letters, set as the neutral Myriad typeface.[4]
- Below is an index of the other properties that ended up getting their own card asset: