External Links

VMC10​_073D.zip
Contains VMC10.exe
Type CLOAD & hit ENTER then select DEEDYORK.​C10 in the JimG subdirectory of the Cassette directory. Type RUN & hit ENTER.
Windows Application (Windows XP and later) (Compressed with ZIP. Free Unzip tools are available for most systems at www.info-zip.org.)

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The Deed of the York

by Dwight Logan

Mystery
1982

(based on 2 ratings)
1 review

About the Story

You are outside of an old house on the outskirts of Grande Prairie. You know that inside the house there is hidden the deed to the land that the York Hotel is on! If you can find that deed before the Chomiuks do, you can save your family's fortune!
There are clues scattered around the house to help you find the magic necessary to locate the deed, but remember-- there is also danger!


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
Oh, for those Wonder-filled Early Days of 8-bit Computing..., August 9, 2014
by jgerrie (Cape Breton Island, Canada)

This was the first text adventure program I ever played. I remember choosing it for the simple reason that its byte count looked about right for fitting into the text buffer of my little MC-10 computer (something like the ZX-81), which was connected to a BBS via 300 baud Modem (text flows in at the speed most people can read at) and simple terminal package. The terminal package was so simple, in fact, that it had no download protocols other than straight text into the buffer and with only 20K in total, that buffer wasn't very big. DeedYork was one of the few non-binary file offerings of a local TRS-80 Color Computer BBS. I downloaded it, then printed the buffer and the re-typed the whole program back in. If I recall correctly part of the program got garbled, and thus a 2nd text to buffer and print operation was required. Much debugging was also required. At the end of this process I was treated to a fairly simple text adventure, which wasn't even a real two word parser. What it really was, was a one word parser, which was so tolerant of additional words, that for a while I was actually fooled into believing it required two words for accomplishing tasks. There are not too many puzzles to solve. Just an old house to explore, some possible death scenarios to learn to avoid and one main intuitive leap to make based on a large number of clues pointing to your discovery of a specific secret word. I recall being so stumped by the main puzzle that I had to resort to the time-honoured recourse of reading the source code. Of course, none of these limitations mattered to a 15 year old kid living in the midst of the 8-bit computer revolution. It was all magic. You're a wizard Harry! The one thing I was left wondering was whether the "Chomiuks", the family who play the role of the bad guys in the scenario, actually represented a real family in the Grande Prairie region of Saskatchewan. If so, I would like to thank them for inspiring a wonderful little piece of my childhood. Enjoy.

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The Deed of the York on IFDB

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Your very first game. by DustyCypress
Do you still remember when you played your very first IF? How did you get drawn (and perhaps addicted) to IF and have been playing still? What was the title that started it all for you? I started with a collection called "The Adventure...




This is version 2 of this page, edited by jgerrie on 18 October 2014 at 8:41am. - View Update History - Edit This Page - Add a News Item - Delete This Page