DreamWorks Interactive

Background
DreamWorks Interactive was the video game division of DreamWorks Pictures, established in March 1995 as a joint-venture between DreamWorks and Microsoft to develop games based on the studio's properties. In 2000, following the critical failure of Trespasser (based on The Lost World: Jurassic Park), it was sold to Electronic Arts to form EA Los Angeles. In 2010, the company was renamed to "Danger Close Games", only to quietly go defunct in 2013.

(1996-October 23, 2000)
Nicknames: "Fishing Boy", "Unlucky Fishing Boy" (variants)

Logo: Same as the DreamWorks Television logo, except that "Times New Roman" is replaced with "Times New Roman", which slowly fades in as the clouds move away, and the boy on the Moon is seen on top of the text.

Variant: On the game variants mentioned below, the logo looks much cheaper, with the moon and clouds having a tint, the boy being white, the sky being black and the name in a different font.

Game Variants:
 * Someone's In The Kitchen! and The Neverhood: The logo is still.
 * Goosebumps: Escape From Horrorland: We see the DreamWorks Interactive logo, and small storm clouds passing by. Then, the moon the boy is sitting on fades into a full moon, and fades into a dark background.
 * Goosebumps: Revenge of the Mutant: We see the DreamWorks Interactive logo, and the moon and the boy fade out, along with the text, to reveal the Scholastic Productions logo set in the DreamWorks font.
 * Dilbert's Desktop Games: We see the DreamWorks Interactive logo, but then Dilbert riding a spacecraft zooms by and takes the boy's fishing pole, who exclaims "Hey!". The logo then fades into the Cyclops Software logo.
 * The Lost World: Jurassic Park: The text zooms in, and the boy manages to get a bite. He says "Got something!" before an off-screen Velociraptor screeches while violently pulling him off the moon to his implied doom.
 * Jurassic Park: Trespasser: The main DreamWorks logo plays, but with "Times New Roman" appears below in place of "Times New Roman".
 * Small Soldiers: The text zooms in, and we see small soldiers climbing up the boy's fishing rod. They throw the boy off the moon, while Chip Hazard shouts, "Commandos, lets open up a big can of whoopass!" The line is connected to a screen with the Small Soldiers logo.
 * T'ai Fu: Wrath Of The Tiger: We see the DreamWorks Interactive logo, but a white silhouette of a Chinese dragon (likely representing the Dragon Master) quickly flies by in front of and behind the boy before it flies through and destroys the logo's text, taking the surprised boy off the moon with it. T'ai Fu jumps onto onto the moon and looks left and right, with the game's logo transitioning in.
 * Medal Of Honor: The text zooms in, and then the boy throws his fishing pole, which reveals a parachute bag on him. He puts on an army cap and yells, "Geronimo!" before jumping off the moon and pulling the string on his bag, resulting in a parachute to come out of it. However, the end of the parachute gets stuck on the moon, and the boy exclaims "Hey!".
 * Medal Of Honor: Underground: Same as above, but this one has a majestic fanfare. Instead of the parachute coming out, it malfunctions, so the boy's belongings fall out and his army hat falls off. He holds on to the moon, and gets knocked on the head with his hat, to which he says "Hey!", and the moon tilts.

Technique: Depends on the variant.

Music/Sounds: The ending of the DreamWorks logo, a 7-note tune (but the guitar is replaced by a French horn; this variant of the theme was also used on the film MouseHunt), the main theme of the game or silence. The game variants have sound effects corresponding to the actions.

Availability: The main version appears on Chaos Island: The Lost World, Warpath: Jurassic Park, Skullmonkeys, and Small Soldiers: Squad Commander and BoomBots. The rest of the variants only appear on their respective games. Note that the Dilbert's Desktop Games variant appears within the game's files and isn't actually seen when starting it up.