Dr. Joe Overview
Dr. Joe was one of those simple, straightforward games you'd find during the Flash era. It came out in 2002, a time when a lot of us were just clicking around on browser game sites. The developer was Joe Graphics, a name that fit the no-frills, homemade feel of the project. It wasn't trying to be a big production, just a quick bit of fun you could finish in a few minutes.
You play as a veterinarian, clicking on a row of animals like a dog, a cat, and a rabbit to figure out which one is sick. The main objective is to diagnose the patient and cure it before time runs out. You use tools like a thermometer and a stethoscope by clicking on them and then on the animal, listening for a heartbeat or checking its temperature. If you get it right, you click the correct colored pill from a shelf and drag it to the animal's mouth. The pace is steady, but it gets faster, and misclicking the wrong tool or pill costs you precious seconds. It feels like a small, precise puzzle where your focus is entirely on matching symptoms to solutions.