Notch
Hovercraft.
Foon → Ludum Dare Explorer → LD12 → Quick and weak entry from me this time
By drpetter
| Category | Rank | Score | Count | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fun | 36 | 2.57 | 23 | |
| Theme | 45 | 2.78 | 23 | |
| Overall | 47 | 2.33 | 24 | |
| Innovation | 56 | 1.78 | 23 | |
| Humor | 5 | 3.52 | 21 | |
| Polish | 52 | 1.91 | 22 | |
| Graphics | 55 | 1.29 | 7 | |
| Technical | 55 | 1.87 | 23 | |
| Journal | 56 | 1.44 | 9 | |
| Audio | 2 |
Hovercraft.
Yum. Chocolate.
Delicious Trophy.
Golden chocolate!
I don't understand. Surprisingly.
;) One of the more humouristic entries, but you can see you only spend two hours on it. :P Bad DrPetter!
What?
The mood is excellent! ;)
Good fun while it lasted, really - just about the right balance between humor and difficulty finding out what commands are available. Bit short though.
Graphics are... not there, which means this is the first N/A in graphics so far - one to go :)
Well... that was minimalist!
I loved it. I wish i could give it more points.
Marbles.
Too many hovercrafts. Really. And then it went all 'ladders for you are bad lols GAME OVER'. Are there any better endings? I don't know. Hovercraft.
I win! Of course, I read the code first. To be honest, I had a lot more fun reading than code than trying to guess the right words to actually play. Come on, "go down"? Whatever happened to "d"?
An excellent _LD11_ entry ... :) Creepy atmosphere. Not sure about a 'natural language' text adventure ... there are conventional commands used for most interactive fiction, and while "n" may be more boring than "walk to the north, pretty please", for players that are familiar with the standard commands using them makes playing the game a whole lot less frustrating ... I guess that's why they became popular since the Infocom years. I guess I should have browsed the source to figure out the commands ...
I suck at text games. I might have to look at the source to get me through ;) I'm voting N/A on humor be course I can't get very far.
Heh.. I feel like writing a text adventure now. I gave you high marks in humor and technical, for making C look like a viable adventure scripting language.