Robot Odyssey

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Robot Odyssey

Developer(s) Mike Wallace, Dr. Leslie Grimm
Publisher(s) The Learning Company
Platform(s) Apple II, TRS-80 Color Computer
Release date 1984
Genre(s) Puzzle game
Mode(s) Single Player

Robot Odyssey is an adventure game, published by The Learning Company in 1984. It was released for the Apple II and the TRS-80 Color Computer.

Contents

[edit] Story

The player is readying himself for bed when, suddenly, he falls through the floor into an underground city of robots, Robotropolis. The player begins in the sewers of the city with three programmable robots, and must make his way to the top of the city to try to find his way home again.

[edit] Gameplay

In Robot Odyssey, the player pilots their robots through each level of the labyrinthine city of Robotropolis, where various puzzles and tasks need to be solved in order to advance through each level of the city and on to the next. A tutorial and robot testing laboratory (the Innovation lab) are also provided with the game.

Player controls three robots from beginning of the game
Player controls three robots from beginning of the game

Except for their initial programming, the three robots are identical inside. They are equipped with four thrusters and bumper sensors, grabber, radio antenna (for basic communication with other robots), battery, and a periscope to use while riding inside a robot.

Throughout the game, the player is presented with various challenges which require programming the three robots to accomplish various tasks. This is done by wiring a synchronous digital circuit, consisting of logic gates and flip-flops, inside of the robots. Tasks and puzzles range from navigating a simple maze and retrieving items to complex tasks requiring interaction and communication between two or more robots. Though the player can ride inside the robots, most challenges involve the robots acting autonomously and cannot be completed with the player inside (and perhaps simply rewiring their robot on the fly).

The robots can also be wired up to chips, which provide a convenient and reproducible way to program the robots. Various pre-programmed chips are scattered throughout the city and range from complex circuits such as a wall-hugging chip which can be used to navigate through mazes and corridors (one of which is wired to a robot at the beginning) to clocks and counters. The player must find out how these chips work themselves, as the only information about each chip is a short, and sometimes cryptic, description.

The Innovation Lab can be used to test out circuit designs in the robots or create new chips. Chips created in the lab can then be loaded into and used in the main game, provided the player is willing to sacrifice one of the chips they are already carrying.

Although the game is recommended for ages 10 and up, it can prove to be quite challenging even for adults. In terms of educational value, the game teaches the basic concepts of electrical engineering and digital logic in general.

[edit] Playing Robot Odyssey

This game can be played in an emulator (there are disk images available at the links below). There is also a clone written in Java, Droidquest, which contains all of the original levels and an additional secret level.

[edit] Easter eggs

In level 2, the subway, there is a room called the "Secret Room of Public Knowledge" (located two screens to the right and one screen up from the starting point) which dedicates Robot Odyssey to Warren Robinett, who wrote the animation utility underlying the game. The room has a lock for a key in it though placing the key in the lock does not do anything.

[edit] Similar games

The engine for the game was written by Warren Robinett, and variants of it were used in many of The Learning Company's graphical adventure games of the time, including Rocky's Boots, Gertrude's Secrets, Gertrude's Puzzles, and Think Quick!, all of which are similar but easier logic puzzle games. The gameplay and visual design were derived from Robinett's influential Atari 2600 game Adventure.

Carnage Heart involves programming mechas that then fight without any user input.

Cognitoy's MindRover is a relatively recent game which is similar in spirit to Robot Odyssey, but uses different programming concepts in its gameplay.

ChipWits by Doug Sharp and Mike Johnston, a game for the Apple II, Macintosh, and Commodore 64 computers is similar in both theme and implementation, although the interface to program your robot differed.

Epsitec Games created Colobot and Ceebot in recent years for Windows machines which are similar in many ways spiritual successors to Robot Odyssey. In these games you program machines to do tasks for you to accomplish puzzle tasks. Instead of using logic flops, switches, etc., these two games instead teach the player the fundamentals of object oriented programming like Java, C++, or C#.

[edit] External links


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