Varicella | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Adam Cadre |
Publisher(s) | Self published |
Designer(s) | Adam Cadre |
Engine | Z-machine |
Platform(s) | Z-machine |
Release date(s) | 1999 |
Genre(s) | Interactive fiction |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Media/distribution | download |
Varicella is a 1999 work of interactive fiction by Adam Cadre, distributed in z-code format as freeware. It is set in an alternate history which features roughly modern technology mixed with Renaissance-style principalities and court politics. The player character is Primo Varicella, palace minister in Piedmont, who has to get rid of several rivals for the regency following the death of the king. The international situation in the game is described in passing: Piedmont is part of a loose confederation of kingdoms that make up a Carolingian League and is engaged in a war against the Republic of Venice.
It won four XYZZY Awards in 1999 including the XYZZY Award for Best Game, and was nominated for another four.[1] The game was discussed academically by Nick Montfort and Stuart Moulthrop in their 2003 paper Face It, Tiger, You Just Hit the Jackpot: Reading and Playing Cadre's Varicella,[2] and by Dr. Wendy Morgan in her 2003 paper Touching (on) Character: New Engagements in New Media Narratives.[3] Cadre himself claimed in a January 2002 interview that it was the best game he had written up to that point: