Gaming Steve

August 01, 2005

So ... Where Are the Graphics?

Zork IBack in the very earliest days of computing (AKA when I was a kid) some of the most popular PC computer games were "adventure" games. Easily one of the most popular gaming genres of its time, adventure games basically consisted of you "walking" around a world, picking up items, combining items, solving puzzles, fighting monsters, and so on until you won game. The graphics for many of these games were rudimentary to say the least, usually consisting of nothing more than simple line drawings, the sound-effects were beeps of various lengths, and the controls were usually along the lines of "drop", "inventory", and "look". In many ways these adventure games were nothing more than interactive stories since the graphics/sound/controls were so limiting. But yet these games were so popular because the stories were often quite good and you could save your progress throughout the game (a rarity of the time).

And of all the adventure games on the market the most popular ones consisted of no graphics, no sounds, and barely adequate controls. This strange hybrid of gaming was called the "text-based adventure game" which is pretty much what it sounds like. You had to play the entire game using nothing more than a text-based interface. That's it. Just text. Nothing else. Oh yeah, and these games were, by far, some of the very best games ever made. No really, I'm not kidding (stop laughing please).

Nearly all of these text-based games were made by a company called Infocom and they were the Bioware/EA of their day. Every couple of months they would release a new game, each featuring a deep, rich story, a fascinating universe, and some of the very best writing I have seen in gaming to this day. Seriously, don't just a game by its graphics. These games might not look like much to those of you waiting for the Xbox 360 to come out, but these games have deeper stories and more involved gameplay than most of cookie-cutter junk coming out for consoles today (Tomb Raider VII, I can't wait!)

I only bring this topic up because everyone who loves the video games should know its history, as well as the fact that I discovered a little gem on the web. It appears that you can actually play the entire game of Zork within a web browser. Zork is the granddaddy of text-gaming and if you are going to start anywhere you might as well start at the beginning. Of course Zork might not look like much now, but this game was "The Sims" of its time and managed to top sales charts throughout a good part of 1980s. You can also download all three original Zork games if you want to give them a whrill. And if you're interested in any of the other Infocom games out there you can pretty much find every single one if you look hard enough (not that I support those illegal activities, not at all). But if you are interested in giving some a try may I recommend Enchanter (as well as the other two games in the series), The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (yeah, this game rocks), Planetfall (one of the funniest games ever made), Stationfall (the sequel), The Lurking Horror, and the Leather Goddesses of Phobos.

And for those of you who never played a text-based adventure game make sure to give Zork a try. It might look incredibly primitive, but the writing is fantastic and some of my very best gaming memories are from these games (I have played nearly all of them). You might just be surprised...

Posted by Gaming Steve at 02:30 PM | Comments (12) | Posted to Classic | PC | Add this story to del.icio.us
Comments

I just killed an hour at work by playing Zork, when people asked me what i was doing, I told them I was coding, hehehe

Posted by Devilmachine at August 1, 2005 04:27 PM

These are some great games. I was not around for their hay day, but a friend of mine lent me a CD in high school with about 30 of them, including all of the zork games. Very fun.

Posted by Zaphod at August 1, 2005 04:30 PM

Bah, who needs graphics. The HHGTG is great though

Posted by Danzik at August 1, 2005 04:36 PM

YAY!

Posted by PatMan33 at August 1, 2005 04:45 PM

How could you leave out "A Mind Forever Voyaging"? Heh, anyway... Yes, I love old-school games, where the focused more on plot and gameplay that flashy graphics... Aah, the good 'ol days... *boots up ADOM

Posted by Psilontech at August 1, 2005 06:22 PM

FYI, I guess HitchHikers is not DLable, but there is a 'mostly text' version here.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/hitchhikers/game.shtml

Posted by legodagonxp at August 1, 2005 07:16 PM

I remember was I was 16, my mother asked me what I wanted for my Sweet sixten. I could have goten a dress or a video game...I chosse pwnage

Posted by Stacey at August 1, 2005 09:55 PM

Female on the internet!?


GASP!

:P

Posted by PatMan33 at August 1, 2005 10:50 PM

Ah...good old text-based games. I remember coming across my brother's copy of Leather Goddesses and instantly setting it to the mature setting, hoping to find some hot action. Instead they turned me into a gorilla and had me get busy with another gorilla. Those guys had serious problems. Text-based was an incredible genre though. I learned how to type thanks to the Discworld MUD and similar games. Great times. -leeman

Posted by lemurbouy at August 2, 2005 12:47 PM

I love text based games. They were great. Sort of a nice hybrid between a book and a game. Made you use your imagination a lot.

also, i think you're missing the word "judge" in this sentence:
"Seriously, don't just a game by its graphics."

;)

Posted by Aaron at August 3, 2005 12:06 PM

Text games were fun but they really were hurt by the lack of graphics. Not fancy graphics but some kind of visual reminder of where you were and what you were doing. While using your imagination is great, it's a lot easier when you can see what you're doing directly.

That's not a slam against the game but something I realized while playing it for the first time. Honestly, I'm intimidated by it. I'm afraid I'll forget something or get lost (I always do with these kinds of games.)

Right now I'm imagining what it would be like if Zork were done as a first person game. Not as a shooter or something with hot coffee but as a true first person adventure game. Maybe someday we'll see that.

And now I don my armor for the coming flames.

Posted by Ryuukuro at August 4, 2005 12:01 AM

Huge props for this write-up on what is arguably one of the best genres in gaming history. I've been a huge fan of the text adventures since playing The Hobbit back in elementary school.

Thanks to the flexibility of text and the enthusiasm of geeky authors around the world, the interactive fiction community is still alive and kicking, though tucked away in obscure corners of the internet. For anyone wanting to find out more about this classic genre and catch up on the modern classics (Curses, Galatea, Photopia, etc.), then Baf's Guide to the IF Archive is what you're looking for. It's basically a map of the IF Archive, with very useful indices and a ton of information on the genre, its origins, and where it is today.

Baf's guide can be found here: http://wurb.com/if/index

Or, if you'd rather browse the archive directly, you can find mirrors here: http://www.ifarchive.org/

Posted by Glubags at August 15, 2005 03:29 AM