Original Colossal Cave Adventure Now Playable On Alexa (amazon.com)
Last month Eric Raymond announced the open sourcing of the world's very first text adventure. Now Slashdot reader teri1337 brings news about their own special project:
A few old-timers here may recall with fond memories the phrase "Somewhere nearby is Colossal Cave..." Well, a voice-playable version of Colossal Cave "Adventure" is now available on Amazon Echo devices as a [free] Alexa Skill. This is a port of the original 1976 text adventure game written by Willie Crowther and Don Woods, which started the interactive fiction genre and led to later games like Infocom's Zork. This version was written from scratch as an AWS Lamda function incorporating the original 350-point game database, and made available with permission from Don Woods.
Very. Very.
Alexa: You can't go that direction.
Yup, going to be LOTS of fun
'nuff said.
I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
But what is Alexa?
(is what I'm saying right now, and what people 20 years from now will say when questioned about popculture fads like Alexa)
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
Good Lord you're up early to start whoring your affiliate links!
And now you earn $55k (with bonus) in IT in Silicon Valley.
Hearing a voice read the text would make it easier for your mind to create mental pictures as you play. I like it!
I hope they will get eaten by a grue.
It's a little bit like playing a freeform pen and paper RPG with a computer as DM. It's also a painful reminder of how simple the Adventure/Colossal Cave parser is.
The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
By me: http://www.kurtz-fernhout.com/...
It's a tool for quickly editing interactive fiction that can be driven by voice recognition.
I actually applied (with mixed feelings, given Alexa's possibilities for privacy violation) to Amazon's Alexa developer funding program to port StoryHarp to Alexa's system just after Alexa came out, but nothing came of it.
A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.