Trivia
I had been involved in a non-computer role-playing game called Dungeons and Dragons at the time, and also I had been actively exploring in caves — Mammoth Cave in Kentucky in particular.
Suddenly, I got involved in a divorce, and that left me a bit pulled apart in various ways. In particular I was missing my kids.
Also the caving had stopped, because that had become awkward, so I decided I would fool around and write a program that was a re-creation in fantasy of my caving, and also would be a game for the kids, and perhaps some aspects of the Dungeons and Dragons that I had been playing.
My idea was that it would be a computer game that would not be intimidating to non-computer people, and that was one of the reasons why I made it so that the player directs the game with natural language input, instead of more standardized commands. My kids thought it was a lot of fun.
— William Crowther (creator of the very first version of Adventure).
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
About the original Adventure:
The game spread like wildfire across the Internet, inspiring such obsessive efforts to solve the game that it is rumored numerous college seniors did not graduate that year as a result.
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
About Microsoft Adventure's predecessor:
In early 1977, Adventure swept the ARPAnet. Willie Crowther was the original author, but Don Woods greatly expanded the game and unleashed it on an unsuspecting network. When Adventure arrived at MIT, the reaction was typical: after everybody spent a lot of time doing nothing but solving the game (it's estimated that Adventure set the entire computer industry back two weeks), the true lunatics began to think about how they could do it better [proceeding to write Zork].
Tim Anderson, "The History of Zork -- First in a Series" New Zork Times; Winter 1985)
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
The programs offered initially to run on the I.B.M. machines will be versions of programs that have been popular on other computers. They include VisiCalc, a popular business forecasting program; three business and accounting packages by Peachtree Software; Easywriter, a word-processing package, and even Microsoft Adventure, a fantasy game. The software, however, will sell in some cases for about twice the price of the equivalent programs sold for use on other competing machines.
Copyright ©1980 The New York Times
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
Microsoft Adventure was completely written by Gordon Letwin in 1979, two years prior to the IBM release.
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
It's an interesting fact that Microsoft made Microsoft Adventure as a PC Booter game instead of making it run on top of the IBM PC's operating system, Microsoft's DOS.
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
PBS's TV documentary Triumph of the Nerds features a video recording of a staff meeting of Software Arts, on the day the IBM PC was announced, August 12, 1981.
Software Arts were the development team of VisiCalc, a spreadsheet program for the IBM PC.
On that meeting is discussed the release of the IBM PC and it's software, including VisiCalc and Microsoft Adventure.
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
Microsoft Adventure is a port of the famous Colossal Cave Adventure, the very first Interactive Fiction game, produced in the '70s.
Contributed by
Nélio RC
(533) on Jul 18, 2005.
Microsoft Adventure was the only game included with the initial set of programs announced and published for the IBM PC, making it the first commercial game on this platform.
Contributed by
stalwart (1) on Sep 24, 2002.
A hint sheet, solution sheet, complete game map, and score breakdown were all available, but you had to special-order them.