Arthur the Wrecker

Summary
Arthur breaks his mom's computer. Can he fix it before she finds out?

Plot
Intro: Arthur mentions that kids like him have done important things. He is then seen in three flashbacks, where he dislodges the nose of the Sphinx in Egypt, accidentally breaking the arms off of Dad's sculpture that is bought soon after, and running into the Liberty Bell and making the crack in its side. It is then shown that Arthur broke a window in the backyard door while playing baseball. He was sugarcoating the accident by making it seem like a to-be "valuable and important" event in history created by an innocent kid. D.W. assumes that Arthur will never forget the accident, and then proceeds to tell Mom about the broken window.

Arthur is eager to play a new computer game, Deep Dark Sea, and he plays it on the family computer right after rapidly finishing his dinner. Arthur has made some progress in the game but can't finish before bedtime, so he saves the game. The next morning, Buster comes over to the house, and dashes with Arthur to the computer to continue the game. They are both hoping to find a "thing" that will earn Arthur free prizes and rewards if found, but are stopped when Jane tells them that she has to work on the computer. When Mom leaves the house, Arthur and Buster play on it anyway, even though Jane had told them that she will need it again when she gets back. When Arthur finds a treasure chest, he and Buster assume it to be the "thing", so they both fight for the mouse, and knock the keyboard off the desk, causing the monitor to go blank. While D.W. exaggeratedly foreseeing the possible repercussions of the computer getting wrecked, Arthur and Buster find the Brain to try and fix the computer before Mom gets home. Unfortunately, he cannot find the problem.

As soon as Jane comes back home through the front door, Buster and the Brain leave, and D.W. goes up to her room. Jane tells Arthur that she won't need the computer until after dinner, so he is welcome to go play on it; however, Arthur declines.

After dinner that night, Jane proceeds to get the computer to work, but Arthur attempts to distract her from finding out what happened to the computer. Finally, he tells her that he wrecked it after playing on it, and apologizes. Luckily, Mom is able to fix the computer by toggling a switch in the back; D.W. then says that they're not going to starve. Mom then tells Arthur that he could’ve just called her and asked her for help instead of worrying, and Arthur admits that he thought she'd be mad. Mom replies, “I’m not mad; I’m disappointed.” She then tells Arthur that she's forbidding him from playing on the computer for a whole week. When she asks if that's fair, Arthur nods, accepting his mom's punishment.

The episode finishes as Jane becomes fascinated with Deep Dark Sea, and plays it passionately that evening.

Major

 * Arthur Read
 * Jane Read
 * D.W. Read
 * David Read
 * Buster Baxter
 * The Brain

Minor

 * Mr. Powers
 * Kate Read
 * Pal
 * Tut (debut)
 * Papa Pharaoh (debut)
 * Tut's mother (debut)
 * Arthurius (debut)
 * Fatherius (debut)
 * Mr. Haney (Ancient Greece) (debut)
 * Binky Barnes

Trivia

 * "Arthur the Wrecker" became adapted into a book in the Arthur Adventure series and re-titled as Arthur's Computer Disaster.
 * It was also an entry in the Living Book series, going by the title Arthur's Computer Adventure.
 * The episode's intro features three historical landmarks and pieces that are accidentally made famous by Arthur: in ancient Egypt he dislodges the nose from the Great Sphinx; in ancient Greece, he breaks Dad's sculpture that a Greek version of Mr. Haney later buys, by chopping of the arms holding a marble sculpture of D.W, thus creating the famous Venus de Milo sculpture; in colonial America, Arthur is running and flying a kite, but rams into a giant bell, creating a big crack in it, and making it the famous Liberty Bell.
 * When Arthur saves the game, the sonar sounds from the Arthur Underwater title card can be heard.

Cultural references

 * When Arthur imagines himself in ancient Egypt, The Streets of Cairo can be heard in the background. When Arthur imagines himself in colonial America, Yankee Doodle can be heard in the background.
 * Arthur mentioning moving to Australia is similar to what Alexander says in the book "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day".

Home video
VHS: DVD:
 * Arthur's Computer Adventure (VHS)
 * Arthur: The Complete Series One