Ancient Anguish

Ancient Anguish

Developer(s) Balz "Zor" Meierhans, Olivier "Drake" Maquelin, project community
Engine LPMud 3.2 (Amylaar)
Platform(s) Platform independent
Release date(s) 1992
Genre(s) Fantasy MUD
Mode(s) Multiplayer
Distribution Online

Ancient Anguish, abbreviated AA, is a fantasy-themed MUD, a text-based online role-playing game. Founded in 1991 by Balz "Zor" Meierhans and Olivier "Drake" Maquelin, it opened to the public on February 2, 1992.[1] It is free-to-play, but has been supported by player donations since 1994.[2]

Ancient Anguish is based on a "map-coordinate" system rather than linked areas, which contributes to the immersive feeling of entering another 'world'. Areas are then placed on the nearly 10,000 room "map" and tied into the geography and history of the fantasy world, called Oerthe. In addition, the mud strives for a "describe-all" policy for all areas, whereby any item/object/feature should respond to as many of the senses as possible, which adds to the immersive quality, although not all older areas conform to current balance and describe-all policies. It is noted as incorporating adult themes into its gameplay.[3]

Administration and site history

A screenshot from Ancient Anguish showing a user listing and an introductory location

In the early 1990s, most MUDs were housed on university mainframe computers, either illicitly or with tacit approval from the computer science department (many of whom played or created the games they hosted). In late 1993, Ancient Anguish faced the threat of being shut down by the Swiss university that hosted the game, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich, for excessive bandwidth usage.[4] Hundreds of players made donations totalling more than US$7000 and bought a SparcStation 2 workstation, relocating the MUD to Washington, D.C.[4]

At the same time, Zor (who functioned as God, or chief administrator, at the time) abdicated his singular authority over the MUD and turned over control to a newly created Senate of Wizards, with Amante serving as the Senate President. The Senate appoints Archwizards of Law, Balance, Quality Control, Education, Mudlib, World and Map, and Driver.[5] The Senate consists of the Arch Wizards of the different functional administrations, plus additional Senators at large.[5] In 1995, Amante abdicated his role as Senate President and the Senate assumed complete control over the MUD, and has continued to administer with 9 to 12 members who periodically change.

Over the next decade, Ancient Anguish was hosted by a number of access providers:

Though its population has never been as high as some other MUDs, it remains one of the more popular LPMuds on the internet today, despite facing stiff competition from commercial and/or graphical MMORPGs. Ironically, Ancient Anguish has been cited by original EverQuest designer Ryan Palacio as being heavily played by the EverQuest development team.[6] It was also the basis of one of the earliest ethnographies of virtual worlds,[7] and was further explored in a master's thesis on the socialinguistics of virtual worlds.[8] The lead designer of Ultima Online, Raph Koster, played Ancient Anguish for inspiration creating LegendMUD.[9] Various aspects of LegendMUD later shaped the design of Ultima Online.[10]

Development

New code is continually added to the game by a team of volunteer "wizards", or coders. Players can elect to become a wizard upon meeting three requirements: 1.) achieving a minimum of 1 million experience points; 2.) completing a number of the quests available; and 3.) earning a number of exploration points (sometimes called "Gaius Points", after the sage who provides hints to guide players to find them). Players may elect to solve more quests and fewer exploration points, or more exploration points and fewer quests.

Exploration points are generally completed thorough exploration, prodding, touching, and otherwise investigating a given area or room, or completion of a mini-quest. The hints provided by the Gaius character are generally vague, and no direct statistic is available to players.

New wizards go through an educational process where they learn about coding enhancements for the game, develop an idea for a new area, and proceed to build it. The system was designed to provide guidance both to experienced programmers and those with no experience. These new areas go through a process of validation to ensure they meet the thematic, quality, and balance/playability requirements of the game, and are then opened to all players.

In late 2005, player levels were expanded from 19 to 50.[11]

The game's move to the Michigan server brought several changes: during the move, the old site was available in "Anarchy Mode", a traditional experience when the game moved from one server to another, with all rules on player killing, multiplaying, wizard-mortal interference, and other guidelines of Law suspended. Since all player files had already been backed up prior to the move, none of this had any long-term effect on players and allowed them to "blow off steam". It proved popular enough that the Senate considered hosting regular Anarchy events on an alternate port of the new server; the Anarchy port was used to host some parts of a mudwide competition called the AAlympics, for example.[12] In addition, the move prompted a change from 25-hour mandatory reboots to 49-hour reboots, which were tested in late April and then made permanent. (These reboots, common in MUDs to recover memory leaks and to clear 'trash' items which accumulate, restore the world to a default state, leaving characters to regain equipment from scratch. All skills, stats, and gold are retained.)

In May 2006, a new continent named Infidian was opened after several years' wait, nearly doubling the available landmass space on the map for areas and alleviating overcrowding of older areas on the main continent of Anguish (from which the game gets its name). Several areas were placed on its map already at the time of opening, and further ones discovered later to bring the number of areas on the new continent to 21.[13] Infidian is reputed to be the historical homeland of the humans who came to Anguish, where the rest of the races already lived, and is nearly pacifistic.

Gameplay

On Ancient Anguish, a player can choose between fighter, mage, ranger, cleric, shapeshifter, necromancer, paladin, and rogue for their character class. A new class, called Artificers, opened in late June 2006.

In 1998 a major overhaul of the combat system was introduced. Players become more proficient in different types of weapons after gaining experience using them. The more proficient they are, the more damaging weapons they can use. Fighters (who lack the powerful spells/special abilities of other classes) are able to skill more quickly than other classes, making them excellent at dealing damage. At the same time, a wide variety of non-combat abilities are available, including fishing, origami, pottery, prospecting, seduction, and weaving. There are also poker tables, several chess boards, and trivia games within the game site.

Guilds

Players can join different guilds on the game, for social or adventuring-related benefits.[14] Each guild has its own purpose and restrictions, along with a guildhall and guild-oriented chatline. These guilds include:

Technical infrastructure

Ancient Anguish is based on the Amylaar LPMud driver[14] and the Loch Ness mudlib, from the MUD of the same name.

References

  1. "November '95 Mud of the Month". The Mud Connector. November 1995. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  2. "Donation Information". Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  3. Benedikt, Claire Lisette; Ciskowski, Dave (1995). MUDs: Exploring Virtual Worlds on the Internet. BradyGames. p. 222. ISBN 1-56686-246-9. Ancient Anguish [...] MUD that mixes combat, socializing, roleplaying, and adult themes.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Donators: 1993-1994". Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "The Senate". Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
  6. Palacio, Ryan. "MUD timeline". MUD-DEV mailing list. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  7. Bartle, Richard (2003). Designing Virtual Worlds. New Riders. pp. 491–492. ISBN 0-13-101816-7. There have, however, been anthropological studies by anthropologists, for anthropologists, of virtual worlds. The first of these was Michael Rosenberg's 1992 ethnography of WolfMOO ... John Masterson's 1994 ethnography of Ancient Anguish draws directly on Rosenberg's work, although it's less formal and more speculative in places. He played Ancient Anguish for two years before writing his (unpublished, but widely read) paper. Many of his observations would be regarded as unexceptional in today's virtual worlds, but of course part of the reason for this is because pioneers like he and Rosenberg made those observations in the first place.
  8. Bartle, Richard (2003). Designing Virtual Worlds. New Riders. p. 492. ISBN 0-13-101816-7. Masterson put his field experience of Ancient Anguish to further good use, writing a 1996 master's thesis on the socialinguistics of virtual worlds.
  9. Raph Koster: "Ultima Online is fifteen", raphkoster.com 2012-09-25. Retrieved 2014-12-03.
  10. Bartle, Richard (2003). Designing Virtual Worlds. New Riders. p. 21. ISBN 0-13-101816-7. That people did play is a tribute to the game's design team, led by Raph Koster. Raph had a background in virtual world design, having worked on 1992's Worlds of Carnage (the first DikuMUD to have an embedded scripting language) before moving on to found LegendMUD in 1994 with Kristen Koster (his wife), Rick Delashmit, and others. [...] LegendMUD was itself an innovative game, boasting a number of features to promote role-playing that had never been implemented before. For example, unlike other DikuMUD derivatives, LegendMUD was classless (players don't elect to be fighters, magic-users, healers, thieves, or whatever); this concept was to shape the design of Ultima Online powerfully. The wide-ranging playing experience of the designers meant that they could draw on ideas from many other codebases, too.
  11. Paldin: "New Levels", Adventurers board archive 2005-05-21, Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  12. Soshi: "Events on Anarchy", Adventurers board archive 2008-12-12, Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  13. Map of Ancient Anguish, Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2013-02-06.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Maloni, Kelly; Baker, Derek; Wice, Nathaniel (1994). Net Games. Random House / Michael Wolff & Company, Inc. p. 91. ISBN 0-679-75592-6. Ancient Anguish (AA) Navigating the wilderness of Ancient Anguish is dangerous. You may want to explore it with other players instead of going off on your own. [...] After choosing from five raceshuman, orc, elf, half-elf, or dwarfyou should try to acquire some essentials; a compass and a pocket map, for instance, will help you find your way around [...] Before joining a class or a guild, you should be aware of the nuances: all the guilds have class and race restrictions of some sort, and there are good guys and bad guys. For instance, the Knights of Drin is the "good" guild based on the Code of Chivalry, while the Chaos guild is for necromancers and other evil magic users. [...] Server: LPMUD
  15. The Snowfolk, Ancient Anguish. Retrieved 2013-06-02.

External links