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From Infocom to 80 Days: An oral history of text games and interactive fiction

20 June 2024 at 07:00
Zork running on an Amiga at the Computerspielemuseum in Berlin, Germany.

Enlarge / Zork running on an Amiga at the Computerspielemuseum in Berlin, Germany. (credit: Marcin Wichary (CC by 2.0 Deed))

You are standing at the end of a road before a small brick building.

That simple sentence first appeared on a PDP-10 mainframe in the 1970s, and the words marked the beginning of what we now know as interactive fiction.

From the bare-bones text adventures of the 1980s to the heartfelt hypertext works of Twine creators, interactive fiction is an art form that continues to inspire a loyal audience. The community for interactive fiction, or IF, attracts readers and players alongside developers and creators. It champions an open source ethos and a punk-like individuality.

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You are standing at the end of a road before a small brick building.

20 June 2024 at 07:35
From Infocom to 80 Days: An oral history of text games and interactive fiction MUDs, Usenet, and open source all play a part in 50 years of IF history.

Just a little something for the nostalgic among us, as well as an invitation to explore all the amazing stuff available in interactive fiction today from Interactive Fiction Technology Foundation, Inkle Studios, and Twine. Cool recent Previously
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