Colossal Cave Adventure
Adventure (also known as ADVENT or Colossal Cave) was the first computer game to appear in the genre of interactive fiction (before it was even called that). Will Crowther, a programmer at the legendary Bolt, Beranek & Newman (developers of ARPANET, the forerunner of the Internet), was a caver, who applied his experience in Mammoth Cave (in Kentucky) to create a game that he could enjoy with his young daughters. [1] Crowther was exploring the real Mammoth Cave in 1972, and did create a map of the real cave, but the game seems to be a completely separate entity, created around 1975. 1976 by Don Woods, who added additional rooms and puzzles to Crowther's unfinished game. It was written in FORTRAN, originally for the PDP-10. Many versions of Adventure may be found, for nearly any computer imaginable.Warning: Wikipedia contains spoilers
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2 Plugh 3 xyzzy 4 Other lines 5 External links |
"You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all different." is a memorable line from the game.
Among hackers it is sometimes modified to refer to something other than passages that one can be lost in (you are lost in a maze of twisty little encyclopedia entries, all different).
What is really interesting about the maze is that the phrase maze of twisty little passages is varied systematically into 12 slightly different formulations:
When you first arrive at Y2, you receive the message A hollow voice says "plugh". The magic word takes you between the rooms "inside building" and "Y2".
Michael Goetz' 581 point /A> version of Colossal CaveVolcanolava1984.)
xyzzy was a magic word found in the game. It has later been used as a metasyntactic variable by hackers and as a marker in program sources for known-incorrect or incomplete code.
Many other interactive fiction games contain responses to the command XYZZY as a tribute to Adventure. Zork, for example, replies with:
xyzzy was a Microsoft Minesweeper cheat.
Other memorable lines from the game are:
Maze of twisty little passages
Plugh
xyzzy
while more recent games have shown a trend of increasingly more elaborate and in-jokeyy responses.Other lines
External links