In this game, you play through 9 holes of golf with 3 coworkers. I never actually beat it, due to bad golfing.
It's actually fairly fun; instead of normal puzzles, you have a real-time drive meter and a left-to-right meter, and you have to get it right in correct spot to win.
I especially had trouble, thinking that a 9-iron would go farther than a 3-iron. But it was still fun.
The NPCs are entertaining, and there are some practice sessions for putting and driving.
A fun diversion.
Bolivia by Night surprised me on multiple levels, throughout the game. It begins with you as a reporter in a Bolivian city who has to interview different people, getting in some comic situations. The game has a lot of real photos included, as well as quotes about Bolivia.
Then, the game changes fundamentally, again and again. I don't think I can put into words how entertaining it was and how deeply different from the opening sequence.
The puzzles are very simple. Sometimes, though, it's just a guess-the-author's brain game. Many solutions rely on applying objects to to things that share common traits (for instance, if it were a fighting game, you would use a blue spear against a blue-eyed warrior). The hints section is well-done, and the game almost delights in guiding you through what to do.
Somehow, this game enchanted me.
Hoosegow's writing is a delight. In this straightforward but slightly difficult one-room escape game, you play a reluctant outlaw with his silly buddy and a drunken pastor trying to get out of a jail cell.
All of the standard messages have been changed to be folksy and homelike. The writing is just great, if you're into hometown western stuff.
The puzzles did not inspire me. It's one of the large class of puzzle games where one or two of the puzzles are unfair, and you could play forever and then give up. It's rare to find a game where the challenges are difficult but fair.
I recommend this game, and very strongly recommend it for group play, to get through the puzzles and have fun reading the responses.
In this game, you play a God, the parser is an angel, and the PC is a worshipper named Bellclap.
The game is fairly short with some unintuitive puzzles. Essentially, you have to help your worshipper make it to safety. He has a variety of tools, but what you have to do with them is pretty odd.
To me, this game is primarily enjoyable as an experiment in parser implementation, with the 3 main characters all working together. Also, the setting is well-described and fun.
Overall, I recommend that people try the first scene.
Fort Aegea is a well made game about a priestess dealing with a dragon. After a brief prologue, you confront a dragon who challenges you to evade them for a day, or else they will kill all virgins in the area.
The map has 4 subareas that you can run off too. Each contains its own miniature quest. Some are much easier than others.
This game has unusual amounts of violence, in the sense that many people die in scenarios that would not kill them in most IF games.
Recommended for fantasy fans.
In this game, you get grounded in space and have to go asteroid mining as punishment.
As you mine, you are confronted with pirates who shut down your ship.
The bulk of the game is a complicated puzzle with reflecting mirrors and xy coordinates and angles. I just followed the walkthrough, and have no idea what clues you would have or how difficult it would be without a walkthrough.
A New Day has an interesting concept. An IF creator died before they finished their game, and one of the NPCs still wants the game to get attention, so the NPC enters it in the IFComp.
The game is mostly unfinished, but as you play, you reach some finished parts. For instance, you go to Greece and uncover a terrorist plot which you have to stop.
The game reaches some parts with messed-up text and weird descriptions you have to get through, before reaching an ultimate scene that is a commentary on text adventures in general.
The ideas are fun, but some of the execution has difficulty. For instance, this time I couldn't use the commands (Spoiler - click to show)PULL ROD or PUSH ROD, although I've completed the game before and thus must have had access to another solution. Also, the puzzle solutions are unlikely to be solved on one's own.
Recommended for fans of IF about IF.
This is a text adventure version of The Tempest. This is the entire play, just slightly reworded and split up into various pieces. As you move about the game, you unlock different conversations which get pagedumped onto the screen a line at a time.
I love the Tempest, but I didn't really enjoy reading it this way, if anything because Parchment kept scrolling to the top of the screen whenever a new line of text occurred.
You can't really do anything besides try to trigger the next section of the game. However, all of Inform's basic messages are changed around, and the parser itself is changed all around.
You play Prospero, commanding Ariel.
In this game with only 4 or so locations, you have a variety of fishing equipment and have to try to catch a giant old fish called the Old One.
You have a variety of options for bait and weights and so on. The actual puzzle, though, is solved by lateral thinking.
It's interesting seeing this and other games from the very first IFComp. It seems like there was more originality and experimentation in the first competition than in the others, where originality was often localized in a few entries.
Somewhat unfair. Recommended for fishing fans.
The Island is a relatively short surreal game with some straightforward puzzles (guess a riddle, search every item, push everything, follow instructions, etc.). It includes some old-school puzzles that are tricky to program (like a raising/lowering bucket puzzle similar to the one in Zork I).
I actually like surreal creepy games like this. The plot structure was strongy reminiscent of Recorded, from a later IFComp.
The ending implies that (Spoiler - click to show)everything is a loop, with you becoming the new screaming man and the screaming man becoming the new guy in the coffin.