The following list of text-based games is not to be considered an authoritative, comprehensive listing of all such games; rather, it is intended to represent a wide range of game styles and genres presented using the text mode display and their evolution across a long period.
- Typing Adventure Typing Game
- Old Typing Adventure Games To Play
- Keyboarding Games Typing Adventure
- Typing Adventure Game
Actually, pro tip: a lot of these sites contain old adventure games that require you to do a lot of typing. And typing sounds just like work. You’re now pretending to work by playing old-school. Best Free/Casual/Online Adventure Games. The game uses a verb-noun parser and only typing appropriate commands can save us from the impending doom of getting lost in a labyrinth or a surprise.
On mainframe computers[edit]
Years listed are those in which early mainframe games and others are believed to have originally appeared. Often these games were continually modified and played as a succession of versions for years after their initial posting. (For purposes of this list, minicomputers are considered mainframes, in contrast to microcomputers, which are not.)
- The best classic and old school Typing games Mario Teaches Typing Mario Teaches Typing is an educational video game developed and published by Interplay Productions in 1992.
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Title | Year Created | Creator | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
BBC | 1961 | John Burgeson | Baseball simulator |
Unnamed American football game[1] | 1968 or before | Unknown | For the Dartmouth Time Sharing System. One of 'many games' in library of 500 programs. |
The Sumer Game | 1968 | Doug Dyment | AKA Hamurabi |
Highnoon | 1970 | Christopher Gaylo | |
Baseball | 1971 | Don Daglow | |
Oregon Trail | 1971 | Don Rawitsch | |
Star Trek (strategy game) | 1971 | Mike Mayfield | |
Hunt the Wumpus | 1972 | Gregory Yob | |
Star Trek (script game) | 1972 | Don Daglow | |
TREK73 | 1973 | William K. Char, Perry Lee, and Dan Gee | |
Cornell U. Hockey | 1973 | Charles Buttrey | |
Wander | 1974 | Peter Langston | |
dnd | 1975 | Gary Whisenhunt and Ray Wood | |
Dungeon | 1975 | Don Daglow | |
Colossal Cave Adventure | 1976 | Will Crowther | The original adventure game |
Dukedom | 1976 | Vince Talbot | |
Empire | 1977 | Walter Bright | |
Mystery Mansion | 1977 | Bill Wolpert | |
Zork | 1977 | Tim Anderson, Marc Blank, Bruce Daniels and Dave Lebling | |
Acheton | 1978 | Jon Thackray, David Seal and Jonathan Partington | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Decwar | 1978 | Hysick, Bob and Potter, Jeff | |
MUD | 1978 | Roy Trubshaw and Richard Bartle | The first multi-user dungeon. See List of MUDs for later examples. |
Battlestar | 1979 | David Riggle | |
Brand X | 1979 | Peter Killworth and Jonathan Mestel | AKA Philosopher's Quest |
HAUNT | 1979 | John Laird | |
Martian Adventure | 1979 | Brad Templeton and Kieran Carroll | |
New Adventure | 1979 | Mark Niemiec | |
FisK | 1980 | John Sobotik and Richard Beigel | Text based adventure game |
Hezarin | 1980 | Steve Tinney, Alex Shipp and Jon Thackray | |
Kingdom of Hamil | 1980 | Jonathan Partington | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Monsters of Murdac | 1980 | Jonathan Partington | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Quondam | 1980 | Rod Underwood | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Rogue | 1980 | Michael Toy, Glenn Wichman, and Ken Arnold | |
LORD | 1981 | Olli J. Paavola | Based on Lord of the Rings |
Avon | 1983 | Jonathan Partington | Shakespeareanadventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Castle | 1983 | Barry Wilks | |
Dunnet | 1983 | Ron Schnell | |
Fyleet | 1986 | Jonathan Partington | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Crobe | 1987 | Jonathan Partington | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Nidus | 1987 | Adam Atkinson | |
Quest of the Sangraal | 1987 | Jonathan Partington | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe |
Spycatcher | 1989 | Jonathan Partington and Jon Thackray | Adventure game originally hosted on Cambridge University's Phoenix mainframe; released commercially by Topologika Software as Spy Snatcher |
On personal computers[edit]
Typing Adventure Typing Game
Commercial text adventure games[edit]
These are commercial interactive fiction games played offline.
Title | Year Created | Creator | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Adventureland | 1978 | Scott Adams of Adventure International | series |
Zork I: The Great Underground Empire | 1980 | Tim Anderson, Marc Blank, Bruce Daniels and Dave Lebling | series |
C.I.A Adventure | 1980 | Hugh Lampert of CLOAD | |
Softporn Adventure | 1981 | On-Line Systems | |
Madness and the Minotaur | 1981 | for Spectral Associates | |
The Hobbit | 1982 | Philip Mitchell and Veronika Megler of Beam Software | |
Valhalla | 1983 | Legend | |
Time and Magik | 1983 | Level 9 | |
Forbidden Quest | 1983 | Pryority Software | |
Valley of the Minotaur | 1983 | Nicolas van Dyk of Softalk | |
The Wizard of Akyrz | 1983 | Brian Howarth of Mysterious Adventures and Cliff J. Ogden for Adventure International | |
The Biz | 1984 | Chris Sievey of Virgin Games | Music band simulator for the ZX Spectrum |
High Stakes | 1984 | Angelsoft | |
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy | 1984 | Douglas Adams and Steve Meretzky of Infocom | |
Mindwheel | 1984 | Robert Pinsky for Synapse Software | |
Zyll | 1984 | Marshal W. Linder and Scott B. Edwards for IBM | |
The Pawn | 1985 | Magnetic Scrolls | |
A Mind Forever Voyaging | 1985 | Steve Meretzky of Infocom | |
Brimstone | 1985 | James Paul for Synapse | |
Essex | 1985 | Bill Darrah for Synapse | |
Hampstead | 1985 | Peter Jones and Trevor Lever for Melbourne House | |
Bored of the Rings | 1985 | Delta 4 | |
Mind Wheel | 1985 | Brøderbund Software | |
Heavy on the Magick | 1986 | Gargoyle Games | |
Breakers | 1986 | Rodney R. Smith for Synapse | |
Terrormolinos | 1986 | Peter Jones and Trevor Lever for Melbourne House | |
Amnesia | 1987 | Thomas M. Disch | The only entirely non-graphical text adventure ever published by Electronic Arts |
Braminar | 1987 | ||
Dodgy Geezers | 1987 | Peter Jones and Trevor Lever for Melbourne House | |
Enchanted Castle | 1987 | Michael R. Wilk[2] | |
Gnome Ranger | 1987 | Level 9 | |
Jacaranda Jim | 1987 | Graham Cluley | |
Nord and Bert Couldn't Make Head or Tail of It | 1987 | Jeff O'Neill for Infocom | |
Sherlock: The Riddle of the Crown Jewels | 1987 | Bob Bates for Infocom | |
Shadows of Mordor | 1987 | Melbourne House | |
Knight Orc | 1987 | Level 9 | |
The Guild of Thieves | 1987 | Magnetic Scrolls | |
Fish! | 1988 | Magnetic Scrolls | |
Ingrid's Back | 1988 | Level 9 | |
Corruption | 1988 | Magnetic Scrolls | |
Dr. Dumont's Wild P.A.R.T.I. | 1988 | Michael and Muffy Berlyn | |
Avalon | 1989 | Yehuda Simmons[3] | A MUD, notable for its pioneering introduction of various innovations such as plotted quests, real estate, banking and distinct skills [4][5] |
The Hound of Shadow | 1989 | for Eldritch Games | |
Humbug | 1990 | Graham Cluley | |
Danger! Adventurer at Work! | 1991 | Simon Avery | |
Spy Snatcher | 1992 | Jonathan Partington and Jonathan Thackray for Topologika | |
The Yawhg | 2013 | Emily Carroll[6] | |
Open Sorcery | 2017 | Open Sorcery Games | Text-Based RPG[7] |
Miscellaneous games[edit]
Title | Year Created | Creator | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Wizard's Castle | 1978 | Joseph R. Power | |
Aliens | 1982 | Yahoo Software | Space Invaders clone for Kaypro. |
CatChum | 1982 | Yahoo Software | Pac-Man clone for Kaypro. |
Ladder | 1982 | Yahoo Software | Donkey Kong clone for Kaypro. |
Snipes | 1983 | SuperSet | |
Sleuth | 1983 | Eric N. Miller | |
Beast | 1984 | Dan Baker, Alan Brown, Mark Hamilton and Derrick Shadel | |
Kingdom of Kroz | 1987 | Scott Miller of Apogee Software | |
Mtrek | 1987 | Chuck Peterson of UCSC | |
ZZT | 1991 | Tim Sweeney of Epic MegaGames | |
Curses! | 1993 | Graham Nelson | |
MegaZeux | 1994 | Alexis Janson of Software Visions | Supports editing the character set to allow for more advanced graphical capabilities than most text mode games. |
Jigsaw | 1995 | Graham Nelson | |
Chibot Ultra Battle | 1999 | ||
PAEE | 1999 | Enrique D. Bosch | |
For a Change | 1999 | Dan Schmidt | |
Shade | 2000 | Andrew Plotkin | |
Shrapnel | 2000 | Adam Cadre |
Online games[edit]
Play-by-email games[edit]
These are play-by-email games played online.
Title | Year Created | Creator |
---|---|---|
Lords of the Earth | 1983 | |
Quantum Space | 1989 | |
Atlantis PbeM | 1993 | |
Eressea PbeM | 1996 |
BBS door games[edit]
These are BBS door games played online.
Title | Year Created | Creator |
---|---|---|
TradeWars 2002 | 1987 | Gary Martin for Martech Software |
Legend of the Red Dragon | 1989 | Seth Able Robinson |
MUDs[edit]
Old Typing Adventure Games To Play
See also[edit]
Keyboarding Games Typing Adventure
References[edit]
- ^Kemeny, John G.; Kurtz, Thomas E. (11 October 1968). 'Dartmouth Time-Sharing'. Science. 162: 223–228. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
- ^Michael R. Wilk (1 January 1987). 'Enchanted Castle' – via Internet Archive.
- ^Lives, Avalon, The Legend. 'Online RPG Game - Avalon - Text Based Games'. Archived from the original on 2015-12-05.
- ^'Richard A. Bartle: Reviews - UK'. Archived from the original on 2015-12-28.
- ^'Designing Virtual Worlds'. Archived from the original on 2015-11-18.
- ^'The Yawhg'. Archived from the original on 2014-06-01.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 2017-05-24. Retrieved 2017-05-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
Typing Adventure Game
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