View Full Version : Text-based Classics
kainemaxwell
02-25-2004, 11:56 AM
Were your favorite text-based games to play like Zork, The Hermit, etc?
Phosphor Dot Fossils
02-25-2004, 12:10 PM
http://www.thelogbook.com/phosphor/apple/q2-01/hhg3.jpg
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy. ;)
scooterb23
02-25-2004, 12:21 PM
What PDF said :D
I also really liked "Nord and Bert Couldn't Make Head Or Tail Of It"
Lots of dumb words puzzles and such, I liked it a lot.
kainemaxwell
02-25-2004, 04:34 PM
Anyone ever play The Hermit?
oesiii
02-25-2004, 04:55 PM
HHGTG of course and Planetfall/Stationfall, those Infocom games had some fun robots in them :D
Lady Jaye
02-25-2004, 08:04 PM
You can play a Java-based version (http://www.douglasadams.com/creations/infocomjava.html) of HHGTG or download the software version (http://free-game-downloads.mosw.com/abandonware/pc/adventure/games_g_h/hitchhiker_s_guide_to_the_galaxy_the.html) (you need the infocom emulator to play it).
Ze_ro
02-26-2004, 12:49 AM
Do Rogue and Nethack count?
--Zero
AB Positive
02-29-2004, 09:19 AM
I still wish I had the copy of Return to Zork that included the Zork Compilation on it. There was a huge hint book that would mock you for using it... classic.
H2G2 is classic as well, another version of the series written by Adams himself that barely resembles any other version :)
EDIT: I almost forgot, there's an interactive fiction contest every year, where people make these games and put them up to judging. Not only that, but really bad IF games sometimes get the MST treatment, where people will write in Joel and the bots mocking the narration of the game.
http://www.ifarchive.org/
check it out!
-AG
TNTPLUST
03-04-2004, 07:03 PM
You can play a Java-based version (http://www.douglasadams.com/creations/infocomjava.html) of HHGTG or download the software version (http://free-game-downloads.mosw.com/abandonware/pc/adventure/games_g_h/hitchhiker_s_guide_to_the_galaxy_the.html) (you need the infocom emulator to play it).
Really cool! Did not know this. I just remarked in another forum that the Babel Fish puzzle is one of my favorites!
Sotenga
03-05-2004, 04:03 PM
Thy Dungeonman, of course. I still can't get ye flask. :D
Seriously, I've never really been partial to text adventures. But I've always liked HGTTG, and I remember playing that Flash version. I still don't know how the hell you get through the bedroom door. x_x
Dan Iacovelli
03-05-2004, 07:26 PM
I used to enjoy playing Scott adams Adventure on the ti-99/4a those were pretty cool back in the day.
Flack
03-05-2004, 11:32 PM
Thy Dungeonman, of course. I still can't get ye flask. :D
Seriously, I've never really been partial to text adventures. But I've always liked HGTTG, and I remember playing that Flash version. I still don't know how the hell you get through the bedroom door. x_x
Nobody was "partial" to them -- we played them because there wasn't anything else to play. Despite how many people claim to love Infocom, we would have all gladly traded those 2 word parsers for a PS2, XBOX, or Gamecube. Or just a joystick.
scooterb23
03-06-2004, 12:26 AM
Slap Flack
- With what?
Slap Flack With Fish
- You don't have a fish
Get Fish
- Taken
Slap Flack With Fish
- You slap Flack with the fish, which Flack does not seem to appreciate. Flack throws New York Times Sunday Edition (with Magazine) at your head.
You are dead.
You are in a barn. There is nothing here but yourself, a pitchfork and a lantern. There is a door to the south, and a ladder that appears to lead to a loft.
:D
oesiii
03-06-2004, 09:57 AM
Thy Dungeonman, of course. I still can't get ye flask. :D
Seriously, I've never really been partial to text adventures. But I've always liked HGTTG, and I remember playing that Flash version. I still don't know how the hell you get through the bedroom door. x_x
Nobody was "partial" to them -- we played them because there wasn't anything else to play. Despite how many people claim to love Infocom, we would have all gladly traded those 2 word parsers for a PS2, XBOX, or Gamecube. Or just a joystick.
Hey! Some people like to read just because some kids can't don't put us down ;)
Flack
03-06-2004, 10:03 AM
Ok, let me restate that; we played them because there was no alternative.
scooterb23
03-06-2004, 11:02 AM
Actually, I have all the alternatives you could ask for, and in the last week, I'm playing nothing but text adventure games :)
There is a certain charm to these games that you can't get with graphics :)
*waits for massive AAAAARRRGGGHH followed by Flack's head exploding* :D ;)
Just playing around man, I know what you mean, and I do agree that once graphics for games got better, that this kind of game went away very quickly. I still like 'em though
kainemaxwell
03-06-2004, 11:29 AM
Watch out for grues.
Ze_ro
03-20-2004, 01:22 AM
I have to admit that I've never been overly fond of text adventures... I think I just have too short of an attention span for them, or I just can't visualize things well enough to keep track of what I'm doing... however, I've recently been fiddling around with Frotz and some of the stuff I've found over at ifarchive. Anyone have any (non-infocom) favorites from the archive to recommend?
--Zero
kainemaxwell
03-20-2004, 05:30 PM
Wow, no one played The Hermit?
scooterb23
03-20-2004, 07:45 PM
Sorry Kaine, never heard of the Hermit. Is there someplace to download it from so I can give it a proper run through???
Gotta say again how much I love Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy :D
Ze_ro
03-21-2004, 03:23 PM
Was The Hermit an old C64 game with "Reading Rainbow" style slow-drawn graphics? Or am I thinking of The Hobbit?
--Zero
scooterb23
03-21-2004, 11:19 PM
I've never heard of Hermit, so I can't say for sure there...but yes, the Hobbit had those kind of graphics.
What a wretched game it was as well.
stonic
03-22-2004, 12:28 AM
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SpasticFuctard
03-22-2004, 12:39 PM
Man, I loved these games. A buddy of mine got Zork Zero for his mac and I ate that up with a spoon. I still have a vast majority of the H2G2 soltion indelibly burned into my skull. Save H2G2 my favorite's gotta be Suspended with Planetfall and Enchanter tied for 3rd.
SF - How the hell did I miss this forum?
Jorpho
03-22-2004, 01:21 PM
Rematch (http://www.umbar.com/Rematch/) is the most stupendous text adventure I have ever found.
Try it. It will not occupy too much of your time, but it will challenge you with a pithy, well-thought-out puzzle that will give you satisfaction to solve.
I don't need to mention Pick Up The Phone Booth and Die, do I?
calthaer
03-22-2004, 07:20 PM
It's true...as much as I enjoyed Zork and the rest, I really think that games like *Mines of Titan* were some of Infocom's best works.
Did anyone play Mines of Titan and wait to open that envelope that came in the package until they actually got to the point in the game where they told you to? That was a great moment for me, opening that envelope.
Oh, back to the topic at hand...I, too, wax fond of the Scott Adams adventures, although I played them on the VIC-20 and not the TI-99a.
NoahsMyBro
03-24-2004, 11:01 PM
I've recently put frobnitz on my Visor, FrotzDC on my Dreamcast, and frotz on my SuSE laptop. I've been having fun with HHGTTG, of course. ALSO, at last year's PhillyClassic I met and spoke with a guy that writes text adventures in his spare time, and produces and sells them.
His name is Howard Sherman, and his company is Malinche Entertainment. While not quite as elaborate, he packages the games similarly to the early Infocom packaging - my game came with a writ on parchment, as well as an old-fashioned metal key.
His games are compatible with the z-machine interpreter used by the infocom games. I haven't spent enough time with the game I bought from him yet (Pentari:First Light), but after my initial play-session I was very impressed at quality of writing, and the complete absence of misspellings or grammatical errors. I expected lower quality from a homebrew. Of course, considering Koffi, Thrust+, SCSIcide, etc... I should have considerably higher standards now.
-- Steve
Griking
04-19-2004, 10:41 AM
My favorite Infocom games were Planetfall, Sorcerer, Beyond Zork and Trinity.
During the Infocom days I also remember downloading and playing a ton of the Eamon text adventures. anyone else play these?
And while its kinda off topic because they have graphics, some of my favorite graphical adventures were Transylvania by Penquin/Polarware and The Spellcasting x01 series by Legend.
Gapporin
05-09-2004, 03:52 PM
I don't need to mention Pick Up The Phone Booth and Die, do I?
Pick Up The Phone Booth And Aisle is probably the funniest text adventure I've ever played.
Jibbajaba
05-11-2004, 12:43 AM
Did any of you guys play those MUD games back in the day? I remember I used to dial into a CRAY machine in town and use it to log into a game of Diku-MUD that was located in Indiana or somewhere around there. Apparently they still have text-based MUDding on the internet...
digitalpress
11-10-2004, 03:08 PM
While re-organizing my Commodore 64 stuff I stumbled into my home-made ZORK map, circa 1984. The map was crudely drawn on graph paper and I clearly had a difficult time with it despite the fact that I was at one time a master D&D cartographer.
That reminded me of a really old DP article on Infocom text games, thought I'd share it with you.
http://www.digitpress.com/archives/arc00027.htm
Hitchhikers and Trinity.. I love those two. As for Zork.. I spent more time on the first one than I'd like to admit.
Professor Hector
11-10-2004, 05:37 PM
I remember playing through some of Infocom's stuff as a child. I spent a lot of time with A Mind Forever Voyaging, and I recall messing around with Trinity and The Lurking Horror as well. I never spent much time with the Zork games, oddly enough. The packaging for some of these games was really remarkable, like the instructions that came with Trinity on how to make an origami crane.
The best IF-related game I played through recently was Shade (http://www.wurb.com/if/game/918), a very surreal game with a haunting premise. Everyone should give it a try, it can be completed in half an hour or so and the game's puzzles are mostly straightforward so even newbies to these sorts of games shouldn't have too many problems. Once what's really happened to your character in the story dawns on you I think you will be very suprised.
DaBargainHunta
11-10-2004, 05:42 PM
I'm surprised that no one has mentioned Deadline. It's a detective murder mystery and an absolute classic - hard as hell though! I still haven't finished it. Who knows if I ever will. :)
DaBargainHunta
11-10-2004, 05:44 PM
You can play a Java-based version (http://www.douglasadams.com/creations/infocomjava.html) of HHGTG or download the software version (http://free-game-downloads.mosw.com/abandonware/pc/adventure/games_g_h/hitchhiker_s_guide_to_the_galaxy_the.html) (you need the infocom emulator to play it).
Where can I find this Infocom emulator? I may be blind, but as far as I can see, a Google search brings up nothing.
Jorpho
11-11-2004, 09:07 AM
It's not called an Infocom emulator, really; it's referred to as a Z-machine. WinFrotz is usually recommended.
By the way, you can now play a shiny Flash version of HHGG at http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/hitchhikers/game.shtml .
Cobra Commander
11-11-2004, 12:11 PM
I still don't know how the hell you get through the bedroom door. x_x
Something about taking the buffered analgesic in the pocket of the old gown laying on the chair. What a great game!
Djfinny
11-11-2004, 02:36 PM
Some of my favorites:
The Count - Scott Adams Adventure
Infidel - Infcom
Haunted House - Radio Shack (not necessarily the best text adventure - but the first one I beat!)
And yes, I've played Eamon adventures on my old Apple 2e computer. Very cool game. There was a series even better than that called SwordThrust. Not as many "adventures" made for it like the tons on Eamons but a more detailed game. Look up SwordThrust if you get a chance