Make eBroadcast my Homepage | Contact Us   Return To The Main eBroadcast Homepage
Australia
Web Guide Search
Australia
Welcome It's
Australia
Australia
Web Guide: Encyclopedia
EBroadcast Australia
Powered by Wikipedia

<<Up     Contents

Hunt the Wumpus

Redirected from Wumpus Hunt the Wumpus is a simple hide-and-seek computer game, featuring a mysterious monster (the Wumpus) that lurked deep inside a network of caverns. Using a command line text interface, the player would enter commands to move through the caves, or shoot arrows along crooked paths through several adjoining chambers. Hazards included bottomless pits, bats (which would drop the player in a random location) and the Wumpus itself. When the player had deduced which chamber the Wumpus was in without entering it, he would fire a single arrow into the Wumpus' chamber to slay it. However, firing the arrow into the wrong chamber would make a loud enough noise to attract the Wumpus, which would devour the player. Thus, the player would only get one shot to kill the beast.

Hunt the Wumpus was the first game written for a microprocessor. Originally written by Gregory Yob[?] in BASIC, and noticed on mainframes at least by 1972, it was first published in the magazine "People's Computer Company[?]" in 1973, again in 1975 in "Creative Computing[?]", and finally in 1980 in the book "Basic Computer Games[?]". Building on several "grid" based games of the "Battleship" variety, Yob injected adversarial humor into the computer's comments, prefiguring the "voice" of the Infocom narrator. 1 (http://www.uwec.edu/jerzdg/orr/articles/IF/canon/Hunt_the_Wumpus.htm) The original shape of the Wumpus' cave was a dodecahedron.

Versions of Hunt the Wumpus are currently available all over the Internet, for almost all operating systems and machines, including GNU/Linux, Palm Pilot handheld computers, and mobile phones. The first bot on IRC was a multiplayer Hunt the Wumpus game, in which firing an arrow into a room with other players caused another player to be killed: "Foo is hit in the back with an arrow!" Unfortunately, the "Wumpus-o-Matic" player never made it off the drawing board. See rogue-o-matic.

Elsewhere
EBroadcast Australia
Search engine
Web directory

CONTENTS:
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z

Australia
eBroadcast Australia
Australia © 06 eBroadcast Australia | About eBroadcast | Legal Notices | Privacy Policy | Contact Us    Return To The Main eBroadcast Homepage