ChipWits

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ChipWits
ChipwitFU.png
ChipWits logo from 1984 manual.
Developer(s) Doug Sharp
Mike Johnston
Publisher(s) BrainPower
Platform(s) Apple Macintosh, Apple II, Commodore 64
Release date 1984
Genre(s) Robot Simulation
Mode(s) Single Player

ChipWits is a 1984 game for the Apple Macintosh, programmed by Doug Sharp and Mike Johnston, and published by BrainPower software. The player uses an iconic programming language to teach a virtual robot how to navigate various mazes. The gameplay straddled the line between entertainment and programming education.

ChipWits won numerous awards, including MACazine Best of '85, and MacUser's Editor's Choice 1985 Award.

The game was developed in MacFORTH, and later ported to the Apple II and C-64.

Mike Johnston and Doug Sharp have announced on ChipWits.com that a new version is coming in 2007.

A review in Computer Gaming World praised the game, but felt the limited storage space (only sixteen designs, with no capacity to use backup disks) and error-prone method for copying robots to different slots were moderate problems.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Williams, Gregg (Apr-May 1985), “Robot Simulations: Tinkerer's Playground”, Computer Gaming World: 22-23 

[edit] External links

Languages