![]() |
Zork from Infocom
Back in 1982, I took out a personal bank loan for $2200 to purchase an Apple //e for the sole purpose of purchasing and playing a $50 interactive fiction game called Zork. The game contained no graphics. It was a text-only adventure.
http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/a..._I_box_art.jpg Zork was published by a company called Infocom. Back then, I was constantly reading computer magazines like Popular Computing, which featured colorful Zork/Infocom full-page ads. In another thread, I happened across another TFP user who knew the game. I thought if might be fun to start this thread and see who else among TFP members played Zork or Infocom games. So grab your brass lantern and share your Zork history, trivia, reminiscence about looking under the rug, and recollect about your adventures in The Great Underground Empire. Also, feel free to share your experiences about any of the other Zork iterations, or the other cool Infocom games or early home computer systems upon which you played it. Just watch out for the grue... |
Go play it here: Zplet: Zork I: The Great Underground Empire
I got into text adventures with the Hitchhiker's Guide game. Prior to that, I was an action shooter player almost exclusively. |
Oh, cool! Thanks for the link!
|
We were talking about grues in chat the other day.
Zork had a number of sequels, the most recent in 1997. I've never played any of them, though. |
Quote:
Zork I: The Great Underground Empire (1980, Infocom) Zork II: The Wizard of Frobozz (1981, Infocom) Zork III: The Dungeon Master (1982, Infocom) Then: Beyond Zork: The Coconut of Quendor (1987, Infocom) Zork Zero: The Revenge of Megaboz (1988, Infocom, text with some graphics) After a six year hiatus, the following games were produced: Return to Zork (1993, Infocom/Activision, graphical) According to Wikipedia, there was also the Zork Quest series: Zork Quest: Assault on Egreth Castle (1988, Infocom, interactive computer comic book) Zork Quest: The Crystal of Doom (1989, Infocom, interactive computer comic book) I did purchase, play, and finish these Infocom Zork-related titles: Enchanter (1983, Infocom) Sorcerer (1984, Infocom) There was also a science-fiction title I played: Starcross (1982, Dave Lebling) The complete list of all Infocom's interactive fiction titles is available at Wikipedia. |
You have been eaten by a grue.
I absolutely played it, but I think I was too young to appreciate it. I was really terrible. It's funny, but I still remember some dining room, with a brown paper bag on the table, a sword.. and a trap door or some such. I think that's as far as I ever got, and always died. And something about a forest that was really confusing, also with a grate in the ground. I also remember a room with sluice gates and lots of switches, and I always managed to botch that up too. But I'm thinking that might've been a different text adventure game, like Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.. |
hmm. a Grue is a type of familiar in this RPG i play, KOL.
looks like this http://kol.coldfront.net/thekolwiki/...Familiar11.gif it wont attack anyone if there is too much moonlight, though. i never really got into text based games. maybe i'll give it another shot. |
Quote:
However, it is also entirely possible that you encountered sluice gates in Infocom's Hitchhiker's game. The Infocom game designers did like to self-reference other Infocom games within a game. Maybe someone who played Hitchhiker's can inform the thread. http://i196.photobucket.com/albums/a...de_box_art.jpg |
I don't remember sluice gates in the HHG game. I for SURE remember the puzzle to get the babelfish in the Vogon hold. You have to have picked up your mail from back on your house on earth, then borrow Ford's satchel, then fire a babelfish out of the dispenser, then while the cleanup droid is fetching that fish, put the satchel down in front of the cleaning droid's port, put the mail on top of it. When the droid tries to go home, it hits the satchel launching mail into the air, and while it's busy with that, you dispense another fish which will land in your ear. Sweet fancy moses, it took me WEEKS of experimenting to figure that out, and I'll be damned if I EVER forget it.
|
Ahahah that's awesome.
Also, for those of you wondering.. you can download Zork1/2/3 at Infocom - Zork Downloads instead of playing it in the browser. |
what a bunch of nerds...
:p |
Quote:
careful what you say..eh..type in this thread, MM. It is pitch black in here. You are likely to get eaten by a grue.... :paranoid: |
promise? :p
*sorry, couldn't resist... |
Promise. Grues are especially fond of bookish, geeky girls who are into photography, crossword puzzles, movies, and hanging out in questionable internet forums....
|
My parents played the original Zork games... but I was too young to play them through.
I did play Return to Zork, though. Here's to us! :) |
Haha. I had Zork I thru III, Hitchhikers Guide, Enchanter and Planetfall. Those were awesome/frustrating games.
|
Quote:
Wikipedia mentions that each game had an assigned difficulty level. I had forgotten that. Maybe someone remembers the Zork I, II, and III difficulty levels... |
I just happened across this at Wikipedia:
The Lost Treasures of Infocom Apparently, there are 2 bundles of these. Hard to tell if it is still being published or not. The article does seem to mostly be in past tense. |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:48 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project