I don't know if it's nostalgia or what, but I still have fun playing it. Which can't be said for a lot of games.
mattbruv•May 8, 2026
I made this port, thanks for sharing it! The reason this game doesn't appear in the original list is because it was made in Shockwave, not Flash. I'm curious if there is any kind of emulator for Shockwave being worked on like what Ruffle is for Flash.
honeycrispy•May 8, 2026
Thank you for bringing back a piece of my childhood!
polytely•May 8, 2026
Thank you for preserving this piece of internet history, I have fond memories of playing these as a kid. Awesome stuff
Yes!!! I spent many hours playing the summer resort games.
Klonoar•May 8, 2026
Did you by chance work on Cartoon Orbit?
darkmarmot•May 9, 2026
Alas no. I worked on their Power Play downloadable system to embed games in a local player and also did stuff like add Mojo Jojo and new levels to games like Power Puff Girls Fast and the Flurrious. Fun times :)
oceansky•May 8, 2026
Thanks for all your work!
giancarlostoro•May 8, 2026
Thank you for being a part of my childhood then! I probably played (like everyone else my age) most if not all CN games. It's a shame they didn't do any sort of effort to preserve them officially.
gaudystead•May 8, 2026
From someone who likely played your work in my younger years, thank you for it!
jjice•May 8, 2026
Please tell which ones! I be lots of great memories of the late aughts and CN flash games
darkmarmot•May 9, 2026
I worked on their Power Play downloadable system to embed games in a local player and also did stuff like add Mojo Jojo and new levels to games like Power Puff Girls Fast and the Flurrious. They had a mini golf game with a 3d golf club I embedded that I spent more time playing than working on :)
rafabulsing•May 8, 2026
My favorite three aren't in there. All Dexter's Lab themed, now that I think about it.
One was puzzle game where you had to bounce a laser off of mirrors to pop balloons. The second was kind of a Chip's Challenge kind of deal I think, where you as Dexter were running away from an out of control robot, and had to collect some computer chips or something.
And in the third game, Dexter was running, inexplicably, a record store? Dunno if it was a tie in for a specific episode I don't remember now, but it's quite a funny premise, and a fun game too.
If you worked on any of these games, thank you! I spent so many hours back then on those, and many others.
I still had dial up back then, and I couldn't stay online for long. Eventually I figured out that if I kept the website open, then disconnected (rather than closing then disconnecting, which was what my parents taught me), the games would still work. Which is obvious to me now, of course, but as a 6~7 year old, who had no idea of how any of this worked, I felt like an actual, proper hacker. I literally just had the thought, "wait, what if..." and was promptly rewarded. I've been chasing that high ever since :)
From then on, my evening routine after school was connecting, picking the 3~4 games I wanted to play for that night, letting them load, disconnecting, and playing to my heart's content. If I hacked anything that fateful night, it was my parent's main excuse to get me off the computer!
throwaway2046•May 8, 2026
The mirrors one was part of the PC game[1], I remember it vividly.
Huh, had no idea it they had a pack like that! I definitely only ever played it on the browser. I doubt that pack released here in Brazil.
Though that's an interesting point: some games were localized on the Brazilian CN website! Not all, but it's cool that at least some of them were.
SbEpUBz2•May 8, 2026
The games you mention are Dexter's Laser Lab, Dexter's Labyrinth and Dexter MixMaster, by developers NetBabyWorld. Those games were originally their own game without the Cartoon Network branding. Labyrinth was based on Ninja Girl 1 and 2 and Dexter MixMaster was originally Tune Inn (that's why this one felt a bit off).
Since they were Shockwave based games they're not playable on modern browsers but they're playable with the Flashpoint Archive project. Huge timewaster, be careful. Better look for the games on YouTube :)
rafabulsing•May 9, 2026
Hah, that explains the out-of-left-field theme! I had no idea they were reskins of exiting games. Interesting how child me managed to unknowingly zero in into the games of a single developer.!
And thanks for the game names as wel, although, I must admit that after posting that comment, I did go looking for them, and... Well, let's just say I've found my MixMaster skills to be quite rusty after all this time :p
thinkly•May 9, 2026
This Dexter's Lab laser game was the first flash game I had ever played, and one of my first actual experiences with the internet. I remember seeing cartoonnetwork.com on the TV, understanding that there are games I could play online, and trying to figure out what the funny phone noises meant with AOL. Someone helped me go online using dialup and I ended up on the website somehow (probably struggling really badly to type as a kid) and it took forever for the flash game to load. At first I had little understanding of what I was looking at, felt very hard to understand websites. I also remember the Samurai Jack one really vividly, even took a note down of the game cheatcode on the TV and hid the note in a drawer after we moved and didn't have a PC anymore, because my parents said I'd have to wait "until I was a 18" to ever have an internet connection again. I was so little, I certainly lost it or someone tossed it, but we got a computer so I did end up enjoying the game a lot! I also really liked the HiHi Puffy Ami Yumi flash games, like the vacation one.
What a shame CN took their classic game sites down, when hosting flash games isn't even all that resource-intensive. An archive by them would've been nice. I recall every couple of years, older games slowly got removed which made me sad, until eventually flash died completely.
My goodness, I've come so far now in life. I know what tools to use to decompile flash games and look at the assets and logic, it's crazy to look back on how much games inspired me to learn about programming because I wanted to make my own.
To anyone who worked on these, thank you SO MUCH for having built them; you've definitely had a positive influence on countless people who were mentally stimulated and learned about how to use computers more in an effort to play them.
hyperbolablabla•May 9, 2026
I enjoyed the Dexter's one which was a point and click adventure where you had to solve puzzles.
weard_beard•May 8, 2026
Same! I added leaderboards to a couple titles and did minor upgrades. Bible Fight, Brak headkicker, and the Inuyasha shell game specifically.
Dracophoenix•May 9, 2026
Which ones? Who were you working with? How did you get published? Did you do any Toonami games?
s900mhz•May 8, 2026
This is awesome!
I hope they can restore the cartoon cartoon summer resort games.
RIP to TV networks and other media entities having free online computer games. Clone-a-doodle-doo and code of the samarai were my games.
ESPN also used to have great flash games. they had one where you'd skate on the roofs of houses and one where you had a BMX game that I think had a racing version and a freestyle version.
ourmandave•May 8, 2026
My daughter was addicted to Ben 10 and would play for hours.
I'd forgotten a bunch of those shows, like Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
(In case the OP also made you think of Teen Titans Battle Blitz for the first time in 20 years)
sudokatsu•May 8, 2026
TTBB was my first foray into fighting games, such good memories.
WillAdams•May 8, 2026
I really wish someone would bring back _Bembo's Zoo_, ideally by translating it to scripted HTML5 or animated SVG....
helterskelter•May 8, 2026
Does anyone remember that Gorillaz flash game? You basically just had a dune buggy and drove around in a 3D world over some randomly scattered obstacles and terrain.
That was my entire computer class in 9th grade.
(that and harrassing teachers with netsend)
amarant•May 8, 2026
Netsend! I almost wonder if we were classmates!
I have unfortunately forgotten the gorillaz game though
baigy•May 8, 2026
No but, this reminds me of gorilla.bas (basic). If you remember THAT, that's something. My first ever game, written in basic :-)
noumenon1111•May 8, 2026
QBasic Gorillas was poggers, but I'm more of a Nibbles guy myself
vunderba•May 8, 2026
I remember being introduced to QBASIC as a kid, and at the time the use of extended ASCII characters for the graphics in Nibbles.bas was legit next-level to me.
Yes that was one of those bizarrely high tech experiences back then.
arionmiles•May 8, 2026
Thanks for whoever preserved these! The CartoonNetwork website was one of my most fondest memories from my childhood.
These days the official website redirects to their YouTube channel which I feel is very sad. There used to be places for kids on the internet, now everything is heading towards major platforms which I honestly feel is going to be damaging the youth in the long term.
rightbyte•May 8, 2026
> major platforms which I honestly feel is going to be damaging the youth in the long term.
What about the short term? Even edgy angst flash movies like Sallad fingers on Newgrounds is pretty cutsie by modern big tech standards.
saarons•May 8, 2026
If anyone remembers gToons from Cartoon Orbit there's also this: https://gtoons.app
willmeyers•May 8, 2026
This is incredible. Thank you for sharing this. I played Orbit so much.
FlamingMoe•May 8, 2026
Who remembers postopia? Great games there as well circa 2002
alex1138•May 8, 2026
Some of it was the death of Flash (though with Ruffle now there may be hope) but the web now just feels much less diverse.
Or possibly I just miss being a teenager. Or some combination
tombert•May 8, 2026
I really feel like there are fewer websites now.
When I was eighteen, I went to Something Awful, Newgrounds, ThatGuyWithTheGlasses, GameTrailers, Cinemassacre, YouTube, and SpoonyExperiment daily. Nowadays it's basically just YouTube for all that stuff (though I haven't watched Spoony for quite awhile).
Newgrounds is still around, I probably should make more of an effort to go there, and I do have stairs in my house, but I definitely don't go on as many different sites as I used to.
I certainly miss the days when everyone had their own web page.
chadgpt2•May 8, 2026
Do you have your own web page? Not just you, the parent commenter, but also you, the random HN reader. If not, why not?
It's fine if it's a bit sparse. Most people don't have a whole lot to publish on the internet.
tombert•May 8, 2026
I actually do! tombert.com.
Though it's more of a blog than anything else.
I might add some GeoCities web 1.0 junk to it at some point.
When I hear anything flash, home star runner comes to mind.
dag11•May 8, 2026
I feel the same thing.
I think part of it also is that, games with the same scope of flash games are still being made, but they're being made for phones which is where the customers. Flash games were the perfect mobile game before mobile games existed.
But the magic was that flash games were created on the same machines they were made on, so curious players (often kids!) had a natural funnel in to dabbling with the creation side, so whole communities of creatives formed naturally.
I don't know how we can solve this disconnect between creation and consumption :(
Sure there's many apps that let you build content from phones (swift playgrounds, other game-making apps, and now a whole gold rush of agentic prompting app-building apps...) but a phone is inherently non-immersive so I don't know how a creator can ever get into a flow state of building content on a phone itself.
But also we possibly just miss being teens on computers.
axus•May 8, 2026
Tried the Courage the Cowardly Dog game, after a nicely animated plane-landing, the game logic was broken and no enemies appeared. Never played the original, perhaps it had the same problem :)
switchers•May 8, 2026
Ruffle doing ruffle stuff, I'd be surprised if the original didn't work.
king_geedorah•May 8, 2026
It's just nostalgia I'm sure but, damn if these didn't coincide with the peak era of the web as a user.
alentodorov•May 8, 2026
i remember mailing webmaster@cartoonnetwork.co.uk asking them what “sourcery” have they used to allow for zoom-in on a website.
antdke•May 8, 2026
As a kid, I could type their URL from muscle memory with my eyes closed - that’s how much I loved this site.
Good times.
regus•May 8, 2026
If you want some more Cartoon Network nostalgia, enjoy this VHS recording of Cartoon Cartoon Fridays:
There were a Dragon Ball Z turn-based game and a Powerpuff Girls basketball game that used to be on CN that I had a blast playing very young.
Sadly, these two seem to be missing
pgoggijr•May 8, 2026
I loved that Dragonball Z game so much. Would love to play it again to see if it’s anything like I remember!
cootsnuck•May 8, 2026
Yes! I was just about to comment the same thing. I sank so many hours into that Dragon Ball Z game. Was called Dragon Ball Z Tournament. And its background music was an instrumental version of Sisqo's Thong Song. Wild.
(Sadly, it doesn't have any screenshots of the trading screen, which was the fun part)
Dwedit•May 8, 2026
I guess the Adult Swim games like "Robot Unicorn Attack" don't count here?
kalabrium•May 8, 2026
Adult Swim Games was its own publisher and Robot Unicorn Attack was their breakout, but they kept shipping past Flash with stuff like Duck Game and Headlander. Worth its own exhibit, honestly.
Night_Thastus•May 8, 2026
I played the CN flash games so much as a kid. Between that and Armor Games, Nitrome, Crazy Monkey Games, etc - I was spoiled for content. It does make me sad to see so much of it lost to time - though I also understand flash was bad and really did have to die.
susrev•May 8, 2026
man.. these are like some of the first games I actually remember playing as a kid
Interesting approach. The key question for adoption is usually about the migration path — how painful is it for existing teams to switch, and what does the intermediate state look like?
Is it possible to just download individual SWF files?
benbristow•May 8, 2026
The Infinity version lets you download as you go rather than download the whole 2TB+! archive.
Can just grab them out of the cache once they've been downloaded, wherever they're stored.
Wowfunhappy•May 8, 2026
I just want to download swf files without installing anything. Then I'll load them up in real Adobe Flash (Flash Projector).
benbristow•May 8, 2026
Flashpoint runs without installing anything via the ZIP version. It's FOSS software so no issue there I hope?
Wowfunhappy•May 9, 2026
I don't meet the system requirements. This is an old OS hence why I have real Adobe Flash.
benbristow•May 9, 2026
Use a newer machine to grab the files then transfer them?
You must have one somewhere, you're chatting on HN with a modern SSL certificate.
Wowfunhappy•May 9, 2026
I'd have to spin up a VM which is entirely too much effort for this. I wish they just let you download the files.
benbristow•May 9, 2026
Respectfully, I think this is a you issue at this point!
nyoronic•May 9, 2026
There is a web version of Flashpoint called 9o3o on https://ooooooooo.ooo/browse. If you click a game and then open your browser devtools and search for "data-game-zip", you will find the link to the game files in that attribute. Download and extract it and go to town.
I learned a lot making these games while studying compsci. The platformer had a custom physics engine and I recall the pizza city open world was challenging to optimize for me at the time. Super fun to work on and appreciated the opportunity to work on these for PixelJam. These games were for comedy network and adult swim so in the same vein.
integricho•May 9, 2026
Most of the teagames flash games are sadly lost, never found them archived even here, yet they were among the best for me, e.g. Top Dog II was so fun back in the day. Teagames was taken over I think and the old games are all lost.
johnea•May 8, 2026
I wasn't Cartoon Network, but we played a lot of LEGO's MataNui flash game.
It was my first experience with what became known as Ambient Games...
maplant•May 8, 2026
There’s on called “sonic boom: link and smash?”
tracerbulletx•May 8, 2026
Where is my beloved Unicorn?
keeganpoppen•May 8, 2026
some of these were actually pretty fun... i can't remember any of the names, but there were a few that were like pretty big adventure games that took like a couple hours to get through that i remember enjoying as a kid. and the best part? you could download the game and then run it offline so that you don't hog the family home phone line! :)
SuperHeavy256•May 8, 2026
Amazing, these games were my childhood. Some of them are actually really good. Hope to see the rest of the ben 10 games uploaded here.
justinclift•May 9, 2026
Heh, this is reminiscent of the Stan Lee flash based webisodes from before they disappeared overnight.
39 Comments
You can play here: https://mattbruv.github.io/ccsr/
I don't know if it's nostalgia or what, but I still have fun playing it. Which can't be said for a lot of games.
One was puzzle game where you had to bounce a laser off of mirrors to pop balloons. The second was kind of a Chip's Challenge kind of deal I think, where you as Dexter were running away from an out of control robot, and had to collect some computer chips or something.
And in the third game, Dexter was running, inexplicably, a record store? Dunno if it was a tie in for a specific episode I don't remember now, but it's quite a funny premise, and a fun game too.
If you worked on any of these games, thank you! I spent so many hours back then on those, and many others.
I still had dial up back then, and I couldn't stay online for long. Eventually I figured out that if I kept the website open, then disconnected (rather than closing then disconnecting, which was what my parents taught me), the games would still work. Which is obvious to me now, of course, but as a 6~7 year old, who had no idea of how any of this worked, I felt like an actual, proper hacker. I literally just had the thought, "wait, what if..." and was promptly rewarded. I've been chasing that high ever since :)
From then on, my evening routine after school was connecting, picking the 3~4 games I wanted to play for that night, letting them load, disconnecting, and playing to my heart's content. If I hacked anything that fateful night, it was my parent's main excuse to get me off the computer!
[1] https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/Dexter%27s_Laboratory:_Sci...
Though that's an interesting point: some games were localized on the Brazilian CN website! Not all, but it's cool that at least some of them were.
Since they were Shockwave based games they're not playable on modern browsers but they're playable with the Flashpoint Archive project. Huge timewaster, be careful. Better look for the games on YouTube :)
And thanks for the game names as wel, although, I must admit that after posting that comment, I did go looking for them, and... Well, let's just say I've found my MixMaster skills to be quite rusty after all this time :p
What a shame CN took their classic game sites down, when hosting flash games isn't even all that resource-intensive. An archive by them would've been nice. I recall every couple of years, older games slowly got removed which made me sad, until eventually flash died completely.
My goodness, I've come so far now in life. I know what tools to use to decompile flash games and look at the assets and logic, it's crazy to look back on how much games inspired me to learn about programming because I wanted to make my own.
To anyone who worked on these, thank you SO MUCH for having built them; you've definitely had a positive influence on countless people who were mentally stimulated and learned about how to use computers more in an effort to play them.
I hope they can restore the cartoon cartoon summer resort games.
Someone already did it awhile back.
Someone already did it awhile back.
Gosh, what a nostalgia trip.
The summer resort games (iirc one big trade quest) were nice too.
https://old.reddit.com/r/nostalgia/comments/yi02h2/who_remem...
ESPN also used to have great flash games. they had one where you'd skate on the roofs of houses and one where you had a BMX game that I think had a racing version and a freestyle version.
I'd forgotten a bunch of those shows, like Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.
There's also a few on the Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/softwarelibrary_flash_unsorted?t...
(In case the OP also made you think of Teen Titans Battle Blitz for the first time in 20 years)
That was my entire computer class in 9th grade.
(that and harrassing teachers with netsend)
I have unfortunately forgotten the gorillaz game though
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXR-bCF5dbM
These days the official website redirects to their YouTube channel which I feel is very sad. There used to be places for kids on the internet, now everything is heading towards major platforms which I honestly feel is going to be damaging the youth in the long term.
What about the short term? Even edgy angst flash movies like Sallad fingers on Newgrounds is pretty cutsie by modern big tech standards.
Or possibly I just miss being a teenager. Or some combination
When I was eighteen, I went to Something Awful, Newgrounds, ThatGuyWithTheGlasses, GameTrailers, Cinemassacre, YouTube, and SpoonyExperiment daily. Nowadays it's basically just YouTube for all that stuff (though I haven't watched Spoony for quite awhile).
Newgrounds is still around, I probably should make more of an effort to go there, and I do have stairs in my house, but I definitely don't go on as many different sites as I used to.
I certainly miss the days when everyone had their own web page.
It's fine if it's a bit sparse. Most people don't have a whole lot to publish on the internet.
Though it's more of a blog than anything else.
I might add some GeoCities web 1.0 junk to it at some point.
https://homestarrunner.com/toons/backtoawebsite
I think part of it also is that, games with the same scope of flash games are still being made, but they're being made for phones which is where the customers. Flash games were the perfect mobile game before mobile games existed.
But the magic was that flash games were created on the same machines they were made on, so curious players (often kids!) had a natural funnel in to dabbling with the creation side, so whole communities of creatives formed naturally.
I don't know how we can solve this disconnect between creation and consumption :( Sure there's many apps that let you build content from phones (swift playgrounds, other game-making apps, and now a whole gold rush of agentic prompting app-building apps...) but a phone is inherently non-immersive so I don't know how a creator can ever get into a flow state of building content on a phone itself.
But also we possibly just miss being teens on computers.
Good times.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwcQH5bF1LI
Sadly, these two seem to be missing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cdaf8ehjuX4
Anyone remember what happened to Steppenwolf and the other games? I do not remember the publisher, I think WB?
It wasn't really a game in the TCG sense, but more of a collecting/bartering game similar to the Grand Exchange in Runescape.
There isn't much surviving media of it since people rarely recorded game footage back then, but someone made a website of it with some screenshots:
http://www.animeexpressway.com/rugrats/ecards.htm
(Sadly, it doesn't have any screenshots of the trading screen, which was the fun part)
they had a really good fighter jet game back in the day.
https://flashpointarchive.org/
Can just grab them out of the cache once they've been downloaded, wherever they're stored.
You must have one somewhere, you're chatting on HN with a modern SSL certificate.
Some games won't work if you try to play them outside of Flashpoint though: https://flashpointarchive.org/datahub/How_Flashpoint_Works
Pizza City: https://flashpointproject.github.io/flashpoint-database/sear...
Cookie Party: https://flashpointproject.github.io/flashpoint-database/sear...
I learned a lot making these games while studying compsci. The platformer had a custom physics engine and I recall the pizza city open world was challenging to optimize for me at the time. Super fun to work on and appreciated the opportunity to work on these for PixelJam. These games were for comedy network and adult swim so in the same vein.
It was my first experience with what became known as Ambient Games...
Looks like there's a wikipedia page about them:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Lee_Media_productions
Oh wow, archive.org took a snapshot of my old website that put them online after the Stan Lee people went broke. :)
https://web.archive.org/web/20050313000913/http://www.stanle...
Right click -> "Enter fullscreen" works pretty well.