Putt-Putt

Putt-Putt is the main and title character of the computer game series of the same name. He is a purple convertible car (though in the games players can change his color) who owns a dog named Pep. Putt-Putt was created by Shelley Day as a series of bedtime stories for her son; the first story involved Putt-Putt saving a cat who is stuck up in a tree.

In the first four games (eight, counting his activity pack with Fatty Bear, his fun pack alone, and two arcade games), he is voiced by an actual boy actor, Jason Ellefson, while in the fifth and sixth games, Nancy Cartwright (best known as the voice of Bart Simpson in "The Simpsons" and replacing Christine Cavanaugh as the voice of Chuckie Finster in "Rugrats"), and Michelle Thornton did his voice in the last game.

... Joins the Parade
His first game, debuting in 1992, was "Putt-Putt Joins the Parade", in which he is petless. In that game, he has to earn money for a car wash (which may also be omitted by getting a paint job, but he can still get a car wash if wanted), and get a pet, and a balloon for the Cartown Pet Parade. This is where he finds a puppy in a cave and uses a bone (which he finds while mowing the first lawn, according to the game).

... Goes to the Moon
While Putt-Putt and Pep are visiting the fireworks factory of the former's adult friend Mr. Firebird, and a window is opened so a butterfly is let in, Pep tries to catch it, only to end up touching a lever that Mr. Firebird doesn't want anyone to touch. Because of this rule being broken, a rocket launches up into the sky, causing Putt-Putt and Pep to blast through the roof and end up in outer space. Finally, they land on the moon. As soon as he tries to cross a bridge over a bubbly green "moon goo", he has to blow his horn, and a convertible named Rover helps him out. He explains the source of his being marooned, and gives him the only thing the astronauts left him: a picture of the moon. To get Rover, Pep, and himself back to Earth, he has to get certain things. In order to buy the rocketship from a two-headed (one male and one female) alien who give him their blue flag (as the guide), he has to get six specific missing parts. So he must get ten glowing moon crystals (that's their currency) (by playing "alien tag" with aliens in craters twice, as the total goal is five crystals per game), the nose cone (by giving the picture of the moon to the man in the moon, who has wanted a picture of himself for 10,000 years), a key from the city hall (he has to choose a specific one, as there is a set. However, he has to save an alien from the moon goo, as Governor Moonbeam only gives keys to those who do good deeds), rocket fuel (by going to three apartments and finally reach Robbie Radar), and a steering wheel (from a moon cliff with help from Rover to give Putt-Putt a lift, and Pep to reach the cliff and get it down). Finally, as soon as Putt-Putt gives the crystals to the two-headed alien, they leave them. As soon as Putt-Putt installs the missing parts, he has to use the key to start the rocketship. Putt-Putt does, and he gets back to Earth with Pep and Rover, and the rocket crashes.

TBA