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Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (video game)

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The game on an Apple II

Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves is dungeon crawl role-playing video game written by Stuart Smith for the Atari 8-bit family and released by Quality Software 1981. An Apple II version was published in 1982, followed by ports for the FM-7 and the NEC PC-8801 computers in 1985. It was the second of four role playing games written by Smith, following Fracas,[1] and preceding The Return of Heracles and Adventure Construction Set.

Gameplay

The player plays as Ali Baba, and travels through a maze-like map of the city and surrounding wilderness in order to rescue a princess. The game involves interaction with shopkeepers and enemies throughout the game's extensive map. Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves incorporates some Dungeons and Dragons conventions as well as various mythological and superstitious elements into the storyline and environment. These include the Western zodiac and ancient Arabic fairytales. The game is also notable for several features rarely seen in RPG's at the time: cooperative multi-player for up to 17 players (using a 'hot-seat'), player defined objectives, and the option to complete the game peacefully (without attacking enemies).[2][3]

Reception

Softline stated that "Ali Baba displays a sense of creative humor that lifts it above routine adventure games ... The text is fresh, the action fast-paced". The magazine called the graphics "simplistic", but praised "its sense of discovery".[4]

References

  1. ^ "Computer Game Museum Display Case - Fracas". www.mocagh.org.
  2. ^ "Computer Game Museum Display Case - Ali Baba". www.mocagh.org.
  3. ^ Addict, Crpg (2 July 2013). "The CRPG Addict: Game 103: Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (1981)".
  4. ^ Bang, Derrick (July 1982). "Ali Baba". Softline. p. 23. Retrieved 17 July 2014.