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Typewriter mystery game

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A typewriter mystery game was a specific type of typewriter art popular in the mid-20th century.

A photo of a typewriter mystery game, its result, and the typewriter it was written on.

A typewriter owner would be presented with a set of instructions: press a key this many times, press another key, move on to the next line. Upon finishing the typing, a picture would emerge on the page. First lines of a simple typewriter mystery could look like this:

[1] 36 spaces, 4 X
[2] 31 spaces, 20 X
[3] 27 spaces, 32 X
[4] 23 spaces, 43 X, 2 spaces, 5 X

Typewriter mystery games were published in magazines (such as Woman's Realm[1] and The Journal of Business Education[2]), and collected in separate books.[3][4][5] The “mystery” in the name refers to the fact that a visual result of the instructions would sometimes be presented on a different page, in the following issue of the magazine, or withheld altogether, making typing the only immediate way to discover the picture.

The end result of a typewriter mystery game would be a picture similar to the later ASCII art,[6] except it would often use overtyping – making several passes over the same line,[1] unavailable or difficult on computer screens. The photo would often be a portrait of a person[1] or an animal.

Photos

A typewriter mystery game in the process of being typed in
Close-up of a typewritten mystery portrait with the overtyping clearly visible

Books of typewriter mystery games

References

  1. ^ a b c Template:Cite article
  2. ^ "Typewriter Mystery Game". 1963. doi:10.1080/08832323.1963.10116707. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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