Ad Verbum

Apr. 9th, 2004 02:34 am
[personal profile] andrew_jorgensen
If you enjoy witty wordplay, devious dilemmas, annoying adherence to alliteration and throwing your computer and/or palmpilot across the room, then you'll love Nick Montfort's Ad Verbum, a wicked little text adventure that reads like what might have resulted had Infocom ditched Douglas Adams and hired John Sladek. Set in the condemned mansion of the Wizard of Wordplay, the game features several rooms that can be escaped only with words that meet specific criteria, a robotic dog who plays the dozens ("Yo mamma goes down more often than Windows 98"), and a cameo by Robert Pinsky.

The game is relatively short; it took me about an evening and a third. There is plenty of help available, though if you have a thesaurus you won't need most of the hints. [Spoilery anecdote; highlight to view.] It is somewhat embarrassing to realize that I am the sort of person who, when faced with a pig in a toga and told that I need to speak in a language he'll understand, will immediately type "Porcus, salve!"

The game's author, I discovered, contributes to Grand Text Auto, a group blog dedicated to Interactive Fiction and surrounding issues. (If you build it, I suppose, they will blog.) On that site I learned that Sony and Philips Electronics will release the first book made with digital paper. At only $375 (in Japan at least) it won't take too many iterations of Moore's law for this to trickle down to the impulse buy level (depending, of course, on one's impulsiveness). Sony seems to be planning on selling it as an e-book, but if they'd just make the screen touch-sensitive and throw in a stylus and some Optical Character Recognition programming, they'd have the ultimate crossword puzzle machine.

Date: 2004-04-09 05:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lynnmonster.livejournal.com
Oooh, neat! I know what game *I'm* playing, if we ever have a slow day at work ever again!

Date: 2004-04-09 03:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dherblay.livejournal.com
You will love it. It's made for you.

Date: 2004-04-09 10:20 am (UTC)
ext_35702: (Default)
From: [identity profile] anadamous.livejournal.com
if they'd just make the screen touch-sensitive...

Diabolical! Then it wouldn't be so cheap, of course. But you're right, it would be the ultimate, and it should be the nature of man to reach for the stars.
Heh heh, you used white to hide your spoiler! You are clever.

Date: 2004-04-09 04:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dherblay.livejournal.com
I can write on my palmpilot screen and it didn't exactly break the bank. I would expect the OCR to be much more difficult, and considering some of my experiences with Graffiti 2, I'm not sure I want to break my crossword concentration to explain that I wrote an "S" rather than a "G."

As for the white spoiler, yeah, I know some tricks. What was especially annoying though was that the LJ style I and several of my friends' friends pages use, Refried Paper, ignores <FONT COLOR="white"> and just made the text small; thus the annoyingly extraneous <lj-cut> tag.

Profile

andrew_jorgensen

April 2009

S M T W T F S
    1 234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 13th, 2025 10:14 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios