Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Interactive fiction (IF) is software simulating environments in which players use text commands to control characters and influence the environment. Works in this form can be understood as literary narratives, either in the form of Interactive narratives or Interactive narrations.
Shade was written in the Inform 6 programming language by Andrew Plotkin, originally written as an entry for the sixth annual Interactive Fiction Competition.Plotkin began working on the game on September 2, 2000, and finished it by the end of the month in order to make the deadline.
Spider and Web is a piece of interactive fiction written by Andrew Plotkin. Spider and Web begins innocuously enough: the player's character, an apparent tourist, has wandered into a blind alley. Upon trying to leave the alley, however, the character is confronted by a voice sneering that this is a lie and threatening dire consequences if the ...
The Interactive Fiction Database (IFDB) is a database of metadata and reviews of interactive fiction. In November 2023, the database contained 12,969 game listings, 12,784 member reviews, 51,762 member ratings, and 17,040 registered members. [1] Some games can be played in the web browser using links on the IFDB web site. [1]
A reviewer for Next Generation scored the compilation a perfect five out of five stars. He praised the "functionally comprehensive" selection of Infocom games and the six Interactive Fiction Competition games, estimated the total playtime at 1,200 hours minimum, and said the gameplay "represents the pinnacle of well written, interactive fiction."
Interactive fiction by decade (6 C) I. Infocom games (1 C, 45 P) T. Twine games (12 P) This page was last edited on 10 December 2024, at 23:12 (UTC). Text is ...
1980s interactive fiction (174 P) 1990s interactive fiction (40 P) 2000s interactive fiction (22 P) 2010s interactive fiction (43 P) 2020s interactive fiction (7 P)
Silicon Dreams is a trilogy of interactive fiction games developed by Level 9 Computing during the 1980s. The first game was Snowball, released during 1983, followed a year later by Return to Eden, and then by The Worm in Paradise during 1985. The next year they were vended together as the first, second and last of the Silicon Dreams.