Difference between revisions of "Colossal Cave Adventure"
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'''Colossal Cave Adventure''', more commonly called '''''Adventure''''' and often described with the adjective "'''''Crowther/Woods'''''", was the first game in the [[interactive fiction]] (once called "text adventure") genre. It was developed by William Crowther and Donald Woods between 1976 | '''Colossal Cave Adventure''', more commonly called '''''Adventure''''' and often described with the adjective "'''''Crowther/Woods'''''", was the first game in the [[interactive fiction]] (once called "text adventure") genre. It was developed by William Crowther and Donald Woods between 1976 and 1977, and there have been many variations and ports of the game since then. | ||
Adventure was a key influence on [[Rogue]], which was essentially the "travelling through a cave" model of Adventure as applied to traditional RPGs such as [[Dungeons & Dragons]], using the [[Curses]] library to simulate movement (instead of entering compass directions as done in interactive fiction games). | Adventure was a key influence on [[Rogue]], which was essentially the "travelling through a cave" model of Adventure as applied to traditional RPGs such as [[Dungeons & Dragons]], using the [[Curses]] library to simulate movement (instead of entering compass directions as done in interactive fiction games). |
Revision as of 20:13, 13 October 2009
Colossal Cave Adventure, more commonly called Adventure and often described with the adjective "Crowther/Woods", was the first game in the interactive fiction (once called "text adventure") genre. It was developed by William Crowther and Donald Woods between 1976 and 1977, and there have been many variations and ports of the game since then.
Adventure was a key influence on Rogue, which was essentially the "travelling through a cave" model of Adventure as applied to traditional RPGs such as Dungeons & Dragons, using the Curses library to simulate movement (instead of entering compass directions as done in interactive fiction games).
Links
- Adventure Article on Baf's Guide to the IF archive.