2003 IFComp Award Winners Announced
An anonymous reader writes "The 9th Annual Interactive Fiction Competition has now announced its winners - the start of the judging was previously covered on Slashdot." There are a number of sites with reviews of the competing text adventures, which are all freely downloadable, and winner 'Slouching Towards Bedlam' ("a game of multiple paths... set in a steampunk universe with Lovecraftian overtones"), and runner-up 'Risorgimento Represso' ("on a par with most Infocom games, and exceeds them at many points", but paradoxically too long to be played through within the 2-hour judging period), both get plenty of kudos from judges.
although paradoxically too long to be played within the 2-hour judging period
It's not actually a requirement that the game be playable within two hours; the rule is that the judges only will play the game for two hours before scoring it, whether they've completed it or not. (And now that the comp's over, it's so much the better to have two such high-quality games that go above and beyond in terms of length.)
Congrats to the winners.
I'm not surprised that the games are Z-Code and the next 10 are all either TADS or Z-Code. I don't understand why anyone would enter a Windows-only (or other proprietary formatted) game. If the home judges can't play the game, they're not going to rate it (highly or otherwise).
It can be parsed like any computer language! Ah, English..."Get in the right lane". "The correct lane?". "NO! The right lane". CRASH.
-Libertarian secular transhumanist
So far I'm intrigued enough by the concept to try to beat the puzzle(s); other works of IF often seem far too contrived. My only annoyance is that some idiot posted a spoiler of what I'm guessing will be a major plot point on r.g.i-f with no warning. I've declared a personal moratorium on reading anything related to games I haven't played to my satisfaction yet.
TO BUY A NEW CAR WOULD MAKE YOU SEXUALLY ATTRACTIVE.
Slouching Towards Bedlam, by Star Foster and Daniel Ravipinto
Risorgimento Represso, by Michael Coyne
Scavenger, by Quintin Stone
The Erudition Chamber, by Daniel Freas
Gourmet, by Aaron A. Reed
Shadows On The Mirror, by Chrysoula Tzavelas
The Recruit, by Mike Sousa
Baluthar, by Chris Molloy Wischer
Cerulean Stowaway, by Roger Descheneaux
The Atomic Heart, by Stefan Blixt
Episode in the Life of an Artist, Peter Eastman
A Paper Moon, by Andrew Krywaniuk
Sardoria, by Anssi Raisanen
CaffeiNation, by Michael Loegering
Temple of Kaos, by Peter Gambles
Sophie's Adventure, by David Whyld
Adoo's Stinky Story, by B. Perry
Domicile, by John Evans
Internal Documents, by Tom Lechner
Sweet Dreams, by Papillon
The Adventures of the President of the United States, by Mikko Vuorinen
No Room, by Ben Heaton
Delvyn, by William A. Tilli (writing as Santoonie Corporation)
little girl in the big world, by Peter Wendrich
Bio, by David Linder
Hercules First Labor, by Bob Brown
Amnesia, by Dustin Rhodes (writing as crazydwarf)
Curse of Manorland, by James King
The Fat Lardo And The Rubber Ducky, by Somebody
Rape, Pillage, Galore!, by Kristian Kirsfeldt
"Prejudice is wrong; you should hate everyone the same."
If you're a lazy windows user like me that's never played one of these before and don't know exactly what to download but you'd like to just play the winning entry, download and install WinFrotz and then grab the winning entry. Run the program, open the slouch.z5 file and you're on your way.