Jump to content

The Fool's Errand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Thefool (talk | contribs) at 19:22, 31 July 2006 (disambiguation link fixed). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Fool's Errand
File:Small-FE.png
Developer(s)Cliff Johnson
Publisher(s)Cliff Johnson
Platform(s)Mac OS, MS-DOS, Amiga
Release1987
Genre(s)Puzzle game
Mode(s)Single player
The Fool's Errand icon
The Fool's Errand icon

The Fool's Errand is a 1987 computer game by Cliff Johnson.

This award-winning game was the first computer meta-puzzle game, a rare blend of storytelling, playful hands-on visual puzzles and cryptic treasure map. It is the tale of a wandering Fool who seeks his fortune in the Land of Tarot and braves the enchantments of the High Priestess.

A sequel, titled The Fool and His Money, is scheduled for release in December 2006.

Release information

The game was originally written for the Apple Macintosh and ported to MS-DOS and Commodore Amiga. The ports add color, but in a lower resolution (320x200, as opposed to the original version's 512x342). Johnson's site advises PC-based players to download the Macintosh version and play using an emulator, specifically mentioning Executor, but other open source emulators will work as well.

The non-Macintosh versions of the game were protected by a symbol-based code wheel. The version offered free of charge given by the author has this mechanism disabled: the challenge screen still appears, but any answer is accepted.

Awards

The Fool's Errand won the following awards:

Structure

The game is structured as a storybook divided into four parts, each containing a large number of different chapters; the storybook can be paged through and read as continuous prose on screen. However, not every chapter is available at the start of the game, and those chapters which are available are not consecutive. Many chapters have a puzzle (called an enchantment) associated with them; completing such a puzzle unlocks further chapter(s).

Frequently, the puzzles are designed in such a way that the result of the puzzle leads logically into the unlocked chapter; for example, the player may complete an acrostic puzzle which results in the phrase "No Ship", which then unlocks part of the story in which a watchperson indeed reports that no ship has been sighted and deals with the consequences. Other puzzles feature pictures which portray parts of the story, or even clues to other puzzles.

The Sun's Map in the Macintosh version

The very first chapter, The Sun, features the puzzle The Sun's Map. This is a jigsaw puzzle with one piece for every other chapter in the story; each puzzle piece appears only when the appropriate chapter is unlocked. Each piece contains a symbol representing the chapter from which it came, plus part of a continuous path which flows through all pieces in the order in which they are mentioned in the narrative. Once the map is successfully completed, other designs on the map become active click targets and can be used as clues or processes to decipher the true final puzzle: The Book Of Thoth, hidden within the chapter The High Priestess, which requires the reader to peruse the entire story as continuous prose and identify a number of phrases hidden within the narrative.

  • Official Site, with author's information page, including download options.