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  2. Dworkin's Game Driver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dworkin's_Game_Driver

    DGD, Dworkin's Game Driver (at one time called Dworkin's Generic Driver), is an LPMud server written by Felix A. "Dworkin" Croes. [1] [2] DGD pioneered important technical innovations in MUDs, particularly disk-based object storage, full world persistence, separation of concerns between driver and mudlib, runtime morphism, automatic garbage collection, lightweight objects and LPC-to-C compilation.

  3. LPMud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LPMud

    LPMud, abbreviated LP, is a family of multi-user dungeon (MUD) server software. Its first instance, the original LPMud game driver, was developed in 1989 by Lars Pensjö (the LP in LPMud). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] LPMud was innovative in its separation of the MUD infrastructure into a virtual machine (termed the driver ) and a development framework ...

  4. Multi-user dungeon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-user_dungeon

    It is also used as a verb, with to mud meaning to play or interact with a MUD and mudding referring to the act of doing so. [92] A mudder is, naturally, one who MUDs. [ 93 ] Compound words and portmanteaux such as mudlist , mudsex , and mudflation [ 94 ] are also regularly coined.

  5. TinyMUCK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TinyMUCK

    The original TinyMUCK 1.0 server was written by Stephen White from University of Waterloo in winter of 1990, based on TinyMUD 1.5.2 codebase. [3] This version improved building capabilities for the users. [4] TinyMUCK 2.0 was released in June 1990 by Piaw "Lachesis" Na from Berkeley, who added the programming language MUF for in-game server ...

  6. MUSH - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MUSH

    In multiplayer online games, a MUSH (a backronymed [1] variation on MUD most often expanded as Multi-User Shared Hallucination, [2] [3] [4] though Multi-User Shared Hack, [5] Habitat, and Holodeck are also observed) is a text-based online social medium to which multiple users are connected at the same time.

  7. List of MUDs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_MUDs

    The general family of MUD server software that the MUD is associated with, if any. Codebase The specific server software the MUD is based on; a blank entry indicates independently developed, custom infrastructure. Multiple items indicate different codebases the MUD has used over time. Mudlib The mudlib the MUD is based on, if any. Contributions

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  9. List of MUD clients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_MUD_clients

    Generally, a MUD client is a very basic telnet client that lacks VT100 terminal emulation and the capability to perform telnet negotiations. On the other hand, MUD clients are enhanced with various features designed to make the MUD telnet interface more accessible to users, and enhance the gameplay of MUDs, [ 1 ] with features such as syntax ...