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    tricks.mirrorz.com - Cheats & Hits Center!
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    GAME CONSOLE & PC RELATED: "Hunt the Wumpus"

    ~* More Games *~

    Hunt The Wumpus


    Be the Wumpus video

    Having shown my Be the Wumpus game to very few people, I wasn’t really too aware of what people might have thought of it. Apparently, it’s a bit more confusing than I had realized. it drops you off in utter darkness with naught but audio clues to what’s going on. If you have joystick troubles, or wonder if your joystick’s working, or have some misconception about how the game operates, it’s not going to be much fun. One person, for instance, thought that the game was a tile based game. That

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    Be The Wumpus 0.04

    I’ve released Be the Wumpus v. 0.04, my little linux audio-only game in which you play a blind, cave dwelling monster (a Wumpus) who eats the unlucky folks who happen to wander into his lair. It is modeled on what descriptions I could find on the net of a little Windows game called “In the pit,” by Studio Hunty. Now the program decodes the ogg files directly to memory, rather then to disk, saving quite a bit of disk space, but more importantly, now it supports the xbox 360 controller and the r

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    Hunt the Wumpus Footprint Cookies

    Buttery jam-filled thumbprint cookies from the 1980 game Hunt the Wumpus. Greetz to the old schoolerz. Hunt the Wumpus started out as a text-based computer game created in the early 1970s. My brother — who suggested this cookie — and I played the TI-99/4A version, which by 1980 had graphics and a grid layout. Title screen of Hunt the Wumpus. In this game, you walk through a network of caves, looking for the Wumpus. Three red spots in a row meant the Wumpus was one circle away. Killing the Wump

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    ~* Hunt the Wumpus *~

    Hunt the Wumpus is an early computer game, based on a simple hide-and-seek format featuring a mysterious monster (the Wumpus) that lurks deep inside a network of rooms.

    About the game

    Using a command line text interface, a player of Hunt the Wumpus enters commands to move through the rooms, or shoot arrows along crooked paths through several adjoining rooms. There are twenty rooms, each connecting to three others, arranged like the vertices of a dodecahedron (or the faces of an icosahedron). Hazards include bottomless pits, super bats (which drop the player in a random location) and the Wumpus itself. When the player has deduced from hints which chamber the Wumpus is in without entering it, he fires an arrow into the Wumpus' chamber to slay it. However, firing the arrow into the wrong chamber startles the Wumpus, which then devours the player.

    Originally written by Gregory Yob in BASIC while attending University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, and noticed on mainframes at least by 1972, Hunt the Wumpus was first published in the People's Computer Company journal in 1973, again in 1975 in Creative Computing, and finally in 1979 in the book MORE BASIC Computer Games. Out of frustration with the idea that all the grid-based hunting games he had seen (Snark, Mugwump, and Hurkle included), Yob decided to create a map-based game. Yob injected adversarial humor into the computer's hints, prefiguring the "voice" of the Infocom narrator. Later versions of the game offered more hazards and other cave layouts. An implementation of Hunt the Wumpus was typically included with MBASIC, Microsoft's BASIC interpreter for CP/M and one of the company's first products. Hunt the Wumpus was adapted as an early game for the Commodore PET entitled Twonky, which was distributed in the late 1970s with Cursor Magazine.

    The TI-99/4A port of the game differs quite a bit from the original; it is a graphical rather than text-based game, and uses a regular grid equivalent to a torus rather than an icosahedron. In this version, the wumpus is depicted as a large red head with a pair of legs growing out of its sides.

    Hunt the Wumpus in other games

    What a Wumpus might look like

    The card game Magic: The Gathering has featured several "Wumpus" cards. The Wumpus seen on Magic cards is a beast with a characteristically-shaped head, jaw and mane. Mercadian Masques featured Hunted Wumpus (reprinted in several core sets, including 10th Edition) as well as Thrashing Wumpus. Planar Chaos, a set concentrating on new takes on popular cards, contained Shivan Wumpus.

    The Wumpus is also found in the open source game NetHack and the game M.U.L.E, with capture of the wumpus in the latter game leading to an in-game cash prize for the player.

    Notes

    1. ^ Peoples Computer Company, founded in October 1971, was a small non-profit group of independent educators who met in a small storefront on Menalto Rd. in Menlo Park, California during the 1970s. The first issue of their journal, Peoples Computer Company, was published in October 1972.

    References

    • Ahl, David H. (Ed.) (1979), MORE BASIC Computer Games. New York: Workman Publishing. ISBN 0-89480-137-6

    External links

    • Gregory Yob's 1975 description in Creative Computing.
    • Download or play the game online
    • Scans of description and BASIC source code for Hunt the Wumpus
    • Scans of description and BASIC source code for Hunt the Wumpus 2
    • Hunt the Wumpus at MobyGames
    • wurb.com entry for Hunter, In Darkness
    • The Dot Eaters entry featuring a history of Hunt the Wumpus
    • Hunt the Wumpus from TatsuSoft Fully playable PC version
    • Hunt the Wumpus by Bill Collins Graphical port to the Atari 2600.
    • Python implementation of Hunt The Wumpus
    • A PHP implementation of Hunt the Wumpus
    • Online Java Hunt The Wumpus, based on TI-99/4A version
    • Wumpus! a diversionary tale by Joseph J. Strout. A graphical adaptation for Mac OS 7.5 and newer.
    • Jungerl contains an erlang implementation of Hunt the Wumpus


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