Jump to content

Asylum (1981 video game): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Corrections and additional info gleaned from the external links (and backed by personal knowledge)
Added IBM PC
Line 1: Line 1:
'''''Asylum''''' is an adventure game created by [[William F. Denman Jr.]] and released in 1981 by Med Systems (later known as Screenplay) of Chapel Hill, North Carolina for the [[TRS-80]] computer. It combines a text adventure with simple line graphics to create a first-person perspective 3D game. Med Systems had earlier released games like Rat's Revenge, Deathmaze 5000, and Labyrinth with the same kind of graphics; these games were among the earliest commercial examples of 3D games. A sequel named Asylum II was released in 1982. The sequel was later enhanced with bitmapped graphics, color, and improved descriptions, and released simply as Asylum in 1985 for the [[Commodore 64]]. There was also an edition for the [[Atari 8-bit family]] of [[home computer]]s.
'''''Asylum''''' is an adventure game created by [[William F. Denman Jr.]] and released in 1981 by Med Systems (later known as Screenplay) of Chapel Hill, North Carolina for the [[TRS-80]] computer. It combines a text adventure with simple line graphics to create a first-person perspective 3D game. Med Systems had earlier released games like Rat's Revenge, Deathmaze 5000, and Labyrinth with the same kind of graphics; these games were among the earliest commercial examples of 3D games. A sequel named Asylum II was released in 1982. The sequel was later enhanced with bitmapped graphics, color, and improved descriptions, and released simply as Asylum in 1985 for the [[Commodore 64]]. There were also editions for the [[Atari 8-bit family]] of [[home computer]]s and the [[IBM Personal Computer]].


==Story==
==Story==

Revision as of 22:04, 20 February 2009

Asylum is an adventure game created by William F. Denman Jr. and released in 1981 by Med Systems (later known as Screenplay) of Chapel Hill, North Carolina for the TRS-80 computer. It combines a text adventure with simple line graphics to create a first-person perspective 3D game. Med Systems had earlier released games like Rat's Revenge, Deathmaze 5000, and Labyrinth with the same kind of graphics; these games were among the earliest commercial examples of 3D games. A sequel named Asylum II was released in 1982. The sequel was later enhanced with bitmapped graphics, color, and improved descriptions, and released simply as Asylum in 1985 for the Commodore 64. There were also editions for the Atari 8-bit family of home computers and the IBM Personal Computer.

Story

The story takes place in a labyrinthine asylum.

One rather confusing feature of that labyrinth is that some sections of it seem to exist in several places at once. So an item dropped in a certain place will also show up in another place of the labyrinth, in a corridor of the same shape (but different orientation), and vice versa.