Home Games Mugwump

Mugwump

PLATFORM

Q42979

GENRE

Strategy game
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Gamer24h Editor's Take

Mugwump caught our attention with its unique design and has shaped up to be a must-play masterpiece candidate thanks to the depth of its experience. Developer Bud Valenti (and students), Bob Albrecht has done a remarkable job of drawing players into its world, earning our admiration with its attention to detail. Its innovative take on the Strategy game genre offers a breath of fresh air for fans of the category. All in all, the Gamer24h team stands firmly behind our rating. This is a unique journey you won't want to miss.

Mugwump is an early video game where the user is tasked with finding “Mugwumps” randomly hidden on a 10×10 grid. It is a text-based game written in BASIC. It was initially written for the PDP-10 and later HP2000.

Development

Mugwump was written by Bob Albrecht of the People’s Computer Company and inspired by a similar program called Hide and Seek developed for the PDP-10 by students of Bud Valenti from Project SOLO in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A sample run first appeared in the People’s Computer Company Journal Vol. 1 No. 3 in February 1973, and source code was published in Vol. 1 No. 4 in April. Source code was again published in Vol. 3 No. 1 in September 1974. Mugwump was later included in the book BASIC Computer Games.

Gameplay

The user enters a pair of single-digit co-ordinates in the range from 0 to 9 which are the x,y coordinates to scan. If the mugwump is at that location then the user is alerted. Otherwise the user is told the distance from the scanned coordinates to the mugwump. The game ends after ten turns or when the mugwump has been found.

Legacy

Mugwump led to similar games such as Hurkle and later Snark. Frustration with grid based games like these led Gregory Yob to produce Hunt the Wumpus.

References

  • Ahl, David H. (Ed.) (1978), BASIC Computer Games. New York: Workman Publishing. ISBN 978-0894800528.

External links

  • Mugwump play helper in HTML5 (archived)
  • Arduino conversion of Mugwump by Emmanuel Turner (archived)
  • C source conversion of Mugwump by Joe Larson on github.com (archived)

🔗 External Links

ℹ️ Content on this page was adapted and summarized from Wikipedia contributors. Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mugwump_(video_game)