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Microsoft Adventure

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Microsoft Adventure
Developer(s)Softwin Associates
Publisher(s)Microsoft Consumer Products (TRS-80, Apple II)
IBM (IBM PC)
Programmer(s)Gordon Letwin
Platform(s)TRS-80, Apple II, IBM PC
ReleaseTRS-80, Apple II
1979
IBM PC
1981
Genre(s)Text adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Microsoft Adventure is a 1979 computer game from Microsoft.

Release

Microsoft Adventure is an implementation for personal computers of the PDP-10 mainframe game Colossal Cave Adventure. Microsoft originally released Microsoft Adventure in 1979 for the TRS-80 and the Apple II under its new division, Microsoft Consumer Products. It was written for the company by Gordon Letwin of Softwin Associates, and was available for the list price of US$30.[1] IBM later included Microsoft Adventure as the only game in the initial software release for its IBM Personal Computer.[2] Adventure was released in 1981 for the initial version of IBM PC DOS (1.0) as a launch title, making it the first commercial game available for the new computer.[3] It was released on a single-sided 514 inch disk, required 32K RAM, and booted directly from the disk; it could not be opened from DOS. Microsoft's Adventure contained 130 rooms, 15 treasures, 40 useful objects and 12 problems to be solved. The progress of two games could be saved on a diskette.[4]

Gameplay

Microsoft Adventure is a text game of cave exploration and treasure gathering where the player enters one- or two-word commands to direct the computer to move and manipulate objects, and points are awarded for areas explored and for treasure acquired.[2]

Reception

Carrington Dixon reviewed Microsoft Adventure in The Space Gamer No. 49.[2] Dixon commented that "No game that exists on several different computers can fully demonstrate the potential of any one computer. Even so, your [money] buys many hours of cave exploring and treasure snatching. There is only one 'set-up' but that one is rich and complex enough to keep anyone busy for many games. I suspect that many people will come back to the one after some flashier games have been permanently set aside."[2]

References

  1. ^ "Microsoft Consumer Products Continuing the Microsoft Tradition". Byte. 4 (12): 179. December 1979. Only Microsoft offers Adventure complete, as originally written for the DEC PDP-10, now implemented on personal computers. The ultimate fantasy/logic game, Adventure allows you to explore the depths of the "Colossal Cave,' [...] Don't be fooled by imitation or incomplete versions. Only Microsoft has it all. Adventure fills an entire disk with everything you need for your exploration. Written by Gordon Letwin, of SOFTWIN, Associates. Adventure for the TRS-80 requires a single-disk, 32K system. For the Apple II" a single-disk, 32K system with either the standard disk or language card system. For just $29.95.
  2. ^ a b c d Dixon, Carrington (March 1982). "Capsule Reviews". The Space Gamer (49). Steve Jackson Games: 34.
  3. ^ Lemmons, Phil (October 1981). "The IBM Personal Computer / First Impressions". BYTE. p. 36. Retrieved 19 October 2013.
  4. ^ "IBM Archives: Product fact sheet". 03.ibm.com. 1981-08-12. Retrieved 2012-01-29.