Ratings and Reviews by GDL

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KBreak, by Kumaria Juan Nazhi - Ol Mokcqa Du Lit Tdraib Kumeinien
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Escape from Traam, by Jyym Pearson and Norman Sailer
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Demon's Forge, by Brian Fargo
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Curse Of Crowley Manor, by Jyym Pearson and Norman Sailer
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Nellan is Thirsty, by Furman H. Smith
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2112, by Anonymous
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Mission Asteroid, by Roberta Williams, Ken Williams, Sierra On-line Systems
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The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai, by Scott Adams and Phillip Case
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Mindshadow, by Brian Fargo
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The Mask of the Sun, by Alan B. Clark, Christopher P. Anson, Margaret Anson
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Strange Odyssey, by Scott Adams
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Castle Quest, by Ben Petroff and Paul Birkett
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Starcross, by Dave Lebling
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Deadline, by Marc Blank
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Zork II, by Dave Lebling, Marc Blank
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Softporn Adventure, by Chuck Benton
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Ghost Town, by Scott Adams
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Pyramid of Doom, by Scott Adams and Alvin Files
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The Black Sanctum, by Stephen O'Dea & Bob Withers
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Mystery Fun House, by Scott Adams
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The Count, by Scott Adams
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Cavern of Riches, by John O'Hare
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Voodoo Castle, by Alexis Adams and Scott Adams
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The Wizard and the Princess, by Roberta Williams and Ken Williams

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
Ambitious, but Dated, June 8, 2011
by GDL (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)

The Wizard and the Princess was Roberta and Ken Williams's second adventure, following on the heels of Mystery House's success. The game's appeal at time of release is easy to understand. This was the second graphical text-adventure ever, and the big, colorful graphics are a huge improvement over Mystery House's unappealing line drawings, helping to build a story-book atmosphere with a certain charm to it. This is also clearly a much larger and more ambitious game, one that sets the tone for the grander scope of the graphical adventures that were to build on its model. However, attempting to play it today is likely to only lead to disappointment.

The simple act of navigation is troublesome: the game begins with a highly frustrating desert maze(Spoiler - click to show) (good luck guessing which of the identical rocks in a series of nearly-identical desert areas doesn't have a deadly scorpion under it!) and is loaded from beginning to end with similarly confusing wilderness areas, with an actual brick-and-mortar maze at the end. Even in non-maze areas, it is frequently unclear what directions are valid exits, and which will go where.

The puzzles are the typical mixed bag of obvious actions and apparently unguessable ones familiar from later King's Quest games (this is officially counted as the beginning of that series). The original method for obtaining hints--other than frantic experimentation--reminds us that this is a game from a slightly different era: the manual includes the actual home address and telephone number for Ken and Roberta Williams, which you are encouraged to use if you find yourself stuck! These days, a quick play with walkthrough in hand may be the best idea for those who want to see the earliest incarnation of the King's Quest series's particular sort of whimsy without tackling the endless mazes and arbitrary puzzles head-on.

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Mystery House, by Ken Williams and Roberta Williams
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Sorcerer's Castle Adventure, by Greg Hassett
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Voyage to Atlantis, by Greg Hassett
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Secret Mission, by Scott Adams
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Hammurabi, by David Ahl and Rick Merrill
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Dog Star Adventure, by Lance Micklus

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
A Typical Early BASIC Game (Literally!), June 7, 2011
by GDL (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)

This game is best known for being the first text adventure to have its source code released to the public, having appeared in the May 1979 issue of the TRS-80 magazine Softside, predating the release of Adventureland's source code in 1980. As a result, its code obviously provided the foundation for many other BASIC adventures that followed.

Gameplay is in much the same manner as Adventureland. There's a two word parser, an abundance of things which can be dropped off in your ship to increase your score (although they aren't clearly marked as *TREASURES*), and a "maze" that consists of a single room where most of the exits just don't take you anywhere. The puzzles, such as they are, are fairly simple, and you mostly just need to wander around gathering all the items you can. Sadly, there are some fairly arbitrary actions that need to be taken, as is common in games of this vintage. (Spoiler - click to show) Good luck guessing what you need to pick up from a room containing "all kinds of things", or divining that the security robot eats hamburgers (provided they haven't grown cold)! The game's greatest frustration is the occasional random appearance of stormtroopers, which may occasionally force you to restart or reload for successful completion.

Mostly, though, this is a basic "pick up everything and drop it off in the score area" game(Spoiler - click to show)--embarrassingly, even Princess Leia is implemented as an item which you must get and then drop in the ship--and can probably be played from beginning to end in under 10 minutes. The whole thing will feel a little familiar to anyone who's played many old BASIC games--as it should, as many of those games copied the code from this one wholesale!

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Pirate Adventure, by Scott Adams and Alexis Adams
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Adventureland, by Scott Adams
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Shrapnel, by Adam Cadre
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Zork I, by Marc Blank and Dave Lebling
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Slouching Towards Bedlam, by Star Foster and Daniel Ravipinto
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Spider and Web, by Andrew Plotkin
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The PK Girl, by Robert Goodwin, Helen Trevillion, Nanami Nekono, and Oya-G
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The Nemean Lion, by Anonymous
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ZRacer, by David Fisher
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Z-snake, by Zach Matley
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Camping, by Gunther Schmidl
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Blue Lacuna, by Aaron A. Reed
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Whom The Telling Changed, by Aaron A. Reed
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Shade, by Andrew Plotkin
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Pac-Txt, by RicMoo
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shadows on the mirror, by Chrysoula Tzavelas
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Llama Adventure, by John Cooney
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VirtuaTech, by David S. Glasser
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The Lost Spellmaker, by Neil James Brown
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Sunset Over Savannah, by Ivan Cockrum
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rendition, by nespresso
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Attack of the Terror Tabby!!!, by Eric Mayer
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Enlightenment, by Taro Ogawa
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To Hell in a Hamper, by J. J. Guest
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Tapestry, by Daniel Ravipinto
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Nord and Bert Couldn't Make Head or Tail of It, by Jeff O'Neill
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Moments Out of Time, by L. Ross Raszewski
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Green Falls, by Paul Allen Panks
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Pick Up the IF-Archive and Pi, by Jake Wildstrom
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Apollo 11, by Brooke Heinichen
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Verb!, by Neil deMause
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Fail-Safe, by Jon Ingold
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The Absolute Worst IF Game in History, by Dean Menezes
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Curses, by Graham Nelson
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Plundered Hearts, by Amy Briggs
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Suveh Nux, by David Fisher
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Lost Pig, by Admiral Jota
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9:05, by Adam Cadre
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Delusions, by C. E. Forman
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Pick Up The Phone Booth And Die 2, by Rob Noyes
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Anchorhead, by Michael Gentry
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Aisle, by Sam Barlow
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Alabaster, by John Cater, Rob Dubbin, Eric Eve, Elizabeth Heller, Jayzee, Kazuki Mishima, Sarah Morayati, Mark Musante, Emily Short, Adam Thornton, Ziv Wities
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Arid and Pale, by Michael R. Bacon
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69,105 Keys, by David Welbourn
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Acheton, by Jon Thackray, David Seal, and Jonathan Partington
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Wheel, by John Toomey
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Statue, by David A. Clysdale
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Adventure, by William Crowther and Donald Woods
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Hunt the Wumpus, by Gregory Yob, Magnus Olsson, and David Ahl
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Rameses, by Stephen Bond
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Glass, by Emily Short
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Best of Three, by Emily Short
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For a Change, by Dan Schmidt
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Floatpoint, by Emily Short
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Photopia, by Adam Cadre
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Ad Verbum, by Nick Montfort
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Leather Goddesses of Phobos, by Steve Meretzky
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Pascal's Wager, by Doug Egan
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Dead Like Ants, by C.E.J. Pacian
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An Act of Murder, by Christopher Huang
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Muse: An Autumn Romance, by Christopher Huang
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The Endling Archive, by Kazuki Mishima
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Violet, by Jeremy Freese
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Augmented Fourth, by Brian Uri!
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Gun Mute, by C.E.J. Pacian
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Snowblind Aces, by C.E.J. Pacian
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Galatea, by Emily Short
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Tough Beans, by Sara Dee
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Stupid Kittens, by Marc Valhara
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