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Dungeon (computer game)

 

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Dungeon (computer game)



 
 
Dungeon was one of the earliest computer role-playing game
Computer role-playing game

A computer role-playing game is a broad video game genre originally developed for personal computers and other home computers. While technically not a separate genre, and sharing the same defining characteristics as console RPGs there are nonetheless general tendencies that make them distinct from RPGs on other platforms....
s, running on PDP-10
PDP-10

The PDP-10 was a mainframe computer manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation from the late 1960s on; the name stands for "Programmed Data Processor model 10"....
 mainframe computer
Mainframe computer

Mainframes are computers used mainly by large organizations for critical applications, typically bulk data processing such as census, industry and consumer statistics, Enterprise Resource Planning, and financial transaction processing....
s manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation
Digital Equipment Corporation

Digital Equipment Corporation was a pioneering United States company in the computer industry. It is often referred to within the computing industry as DEC ....
.

Dungeon was written in 1975 or 1976 by Don Daglow
Don Daglow

Don Daglow is an United States computer game and video game game designer, game programmer and game producer. He is best known for designing a series of pioneering simulation games and role-playing games, as well as the first computer baseball game and the first graphical MMORPG, all between 1971 and 1995....
, then a student at Claremont Graduate University
Claremont Graduate University

Claremont Graduate University is a private graduate-only university. CGU is a member of the Claremont Colleges....
. The game was an unlicensed implementation of the new role-playing game
Role-playing game

A role-playing game is a game in which the participants assume the roles of fictional characters. Participants determine the actions of their characters based on their characterization, and the actions succeed or fail according to a role-playing game system of rules and guidelines....
 Dungeons & Dragons
Dungeons & Dragons

Dungeons & Dragons is a fantasy role-playing game originally designed by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson, and first published in 1974 by TSR, Inc....
 (D&D) and described the movements of a multi-player party through a monster-inhabited dungeon
Dungeon crawl

A dungeon crawl is a type of role-playing game in which heroes navigate a labyrinthine environment, battling various monsters and looting any treasure they may find....
. Players chose what actions to take in combat and where to move each character in the party, which made the game very slow to play by today's standards.






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Dungeon was one of the earliest computer role-playing game
Computer role-playing game

A computer role-playing game is a broad video game genre originally developed for personal computers and other home computers. While technically not a separate genre, and sharing the same defining characteristics as console RPGs there are nonetheless general tendencies that make them distinct from RPGs on other platforms....
s, running on PDP-10
PDP-10

The PDP-10 was a mainframe computer manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation from the late 1960s on; the name stands for "Programmed Data Processor model 10"....
 mainframe computer
Mainframe computer

Mainframes are computers used mainly by large organizations for critical applications, typically bulk data processing such as census, industry and consumer statistics, Enterprise Resource Planning, and financial transaction processing....
s manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation
Digital Equipment Corporation

Digital Equipment Corporation was a pioneering United States company in the computer industry. It is often referred to within the computing industry as DEC ....
.

Dungeon was written in 1975 or 1976 by Don Daglow
Don Daglow

Don Daglow is an United States computer game and video game game designer, game programmer and game producer. He is best known for designing a series of pioneering simulation games and role-playing games, as well as the first computer baseball game and the first graphical MMORPG, all between 1971 and 1995....
, then a student at Claremont Graduate University
Claremont Graduate University

Claremont Graduate University is a private graduate-only university. CGU is a member of the Claremont Colleges....
. The game was an unlicensed implementation of the new role-playing game
Role-playing game

A role-playing game is a game in which the participants assume the roles of fictional characters. Participants determine the actions of their characters based on their characterization, and the actions succeed or fail according to a role-playing game system of rules and guidelines....
 Dungeons & Dragons
Dungeons & Dragons

Dungeons & Dragons is a fantasy role-playing game originally designed by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson, and first published in 1974 by TSR, Inc....
 (D&D) and described the movements of a multi-player party through a monster-inhabited dungeon
Dungeon crawl

A dungeon crawl is a type of role-playing game in which heroes navigate a labyrinthine environment, battling various monsters and looting any treasure they may find....
. Players chose what actions to take in combat and where to move each character in the party, which made the game very slow to play by today's standards. Characters earned experience point
Experience point

An experience point is a unit of measurement used in many role-playing games and role-playing video games to quantify a player character's progression through the game....
s and gained skills as their "level" grew, as in D&D, and most of the basic tenets of D&D were reflected.

Although the game was nominally played entirely in text, it was also the first game to employ line of sight
Line of sight (gaming)

Line of sight, sometimes written line-of-sight, is a term used in wargames and some role-playing games . It refers to visibility on the playing field....
 graphics displays. Its use of computer graphics
Computer graphics

Computer graphics are graphics created by computers and, more generally, the representation and manipulation of pictorial data by a computer....
 consisted of top-down dungeon maps that showed the portions of the playfield the party had seen, allowing for light or darkness, the different "infravision
Infrared

Infrared radiation is electromagnetic radiation whose wavelength is longer than that of visible light , but shorter than that of terahertz radiation and microwaves ....
" abilities of elves
Elf

An elf is a creature of Germanic mythology. The elves were originally thought of as a race of minor nature and fertility deity, who are often pictured as youthful-seeming men and women of great beauty living in forests and underground places and caves, or in wells and springs....
, dwarves
Dwarf

A dwarf is a creature from Continental Germanic mythology, fairy tales, fantasy fiction, and role-playing games. It usually has magical talents, often involving metallurgy....
, etc.

This advancement was possible because many university computer terminals had switched by the mid-1970s to CRT
Cathode ray tube

The cathode ray tube is a vacuum tube containing an electron gun and a fluorescent screen, with internal or external means to accelerate and deflect the electron beam, used to create images in the form of light emitted from the fluorescent screen....
 screens, which could be refreshed with text in a few seconds instead of a minute or more. Earlier games printed game status for the player on teletype
Teleprinter

A teleprinter is a now largely obsolete electro-mechanical typewriter which can be used to communicate typed messages from Point-to-point and Point-to-multipoint communication over a variety of communications channels that range from a simple electrical connection, such as a pair of wires, to the use of radio and microwave as the transmi...
 machines or a line printer
Line printer

The line printer is a form of high speed impact computer printer in which one line of type is printed at a time. They are mostly associated with the early days of computing, but the technology is still in use....
, at speeds ranging from 10 to 30 characters per second with a rat-a-tat-tat sound as a metal ball or belt with characters was pressed against paper through an inked ribbon by a hammer.

While Dungeon was widely available via DECUS
DECUS

DECUS is an independent association of users of Hewlett-Packard and HP Partners. The membership association, registered in Munich, Germany, acts as part of the worldwide Association of Hewlett-Packard User Groups in Germany and Austria....
, it was picked up by fewer universities and systems in the mid-1970s than Daglow's earlier Star Trek
Star Trek (script game)

Star Trek was a text-based Mainframe computer computer game written by Don Daglow on a PDP-10 timesharing computer at Pomona College in 1972, and upgraded periodically through 1974, including contributions by Jonathan Osser....
 computer game had been in 1971, primarily because it took a then-significant 36K of system RAM
Ram

Ram, ram, or RAM as a non-acronymic wordAs a non-acronymic word Ram, ram, or RAM may refer to:...
 versus 32K for Star Trek. Many schools viewed games as gimmicks to interest students in computers, but wanted only small, fast-play examples to minimize games' actual use to reserve time for math and science research and student use. As a result, the early-1970s' maximum size of 32K that many schools set as a limit on games had been downgraded on some campuses to as little as 16K.

Years later, DECUS distributed another game named "Dungeon", a version of Zork
Zork

Zork was one of the first interactive fiction computer games and an early descendant of Colossal Cave Adventure. The first version of Zork was written in 1977?1979 on a PDP-10 computer by Tim Anderson , Marc Blank, Bruce Daniels , and Dave Lebling, and implemented in the MDL programming language....
.