Moria

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Moria
Developer Robert Alan Koeneke
Theme fantasy
Influences Rogue
Status Stable v4.7?
Released 1983
Updated 1987?
Licensing copyleft source, freeware
P. Language Pascal
Platforms ?
Interface ASCII, Keyboard
Game Length ?
[{{{site}}} Official site of Moria]


Moria, first released in 1983, is one of the earliest clones of Rogue.

Description

Moria was based on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, and the player had to go down the mines of Moria and ultimately kill the Balrog to win the game.

Moria is one of the older roguelikes, writen in 1983 by Robert Alan Koeneke. It was the first Open Source roguelike, allowing it to run into different platforms in a time when that was hard to achieve.

Although the game is not as popular as it once was, it is still considered a major Roguelike.

This game was the first roguelike to have a "Town" level, where you may buy your weapons and armor, amongst many other things

The game world are "The Dungeons (or Mines) of Moria", and altough the name comes from the world of Tolkien, there is little that the game shares with the books.

In the deepest level, you must find and destroy the Balrog. This is a hard quest for which you must prepare with the proper equipment and character enhancement items.

The last official Moria (4.7) was released in 1987. Its creator was working in Moria 5.0, which was an almost complete remake with interesting features like streams, lakes and new weapons. It was, however, never released.

The open source nature of Moria allowed it to survive, and after the creation of UMoria in 1988 (which moved the language to C) the game spawned many variants, of which Angband and the later Bands are the most popular.

Versions and platforms

Moria was written by Robert Alan Koeneke in 1983, in VMS Pascal. According to the author, he started development when, after being hooked on Rogue, he moved to another department where the game wasn't available. He released the source code in 1985. Last version he made was v4.7 in 1987.

After being ported to C by various people, Moria became available on many platforms, such as Unix (UMoria), DOS, Amiga, etc.

Legacy

Due to releasing its source code, Moria was used by several variants, the most succesful being Angband.

Related topics

Related links