Akalabeth: World of Doom
Akalabeth: World of Doom | |
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Developer(s) | Richard Garriott |
Publisher(s) | California Pacific Computer Co. |
Designer(s) | Richard Garriott |
Platform(s) | Apple II, DOS |
Release date(s) |
circa 1979 (limited release), 1980-1981 (California Pacific release) |
Genre(s) | Role-playing video game |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Akalabeth: World of Doom /əˈkæləbɛθ/ is a role-playing video game that had a limited release in 1979 and was then published by California Pacific Computer Company for the Apple II in 1980. Richard Garriott designed the game as a hobbyist project, which is now recognized as one of the earliest known examples of a role-playing video game[1] and as a predecessor of the Ultima series of games that started Garriott's career.[2]
History
The game was made by teenager Richard Garriott in Applesoft BASIC for the Apple II while attending high school in the Houston, Texas suburbs.[2][3] Begun first as a school project during his junior year using the school's mainframe system and Apple II computer, as well as another Apple II bought for him by his father, the game continually evolved over several years under the working title D&D with the help of his friends and regular Dungeons & Dragons partners who acted as play-testers.[2] Development of the game began soon after his initial encounter with Apple computers in the summer of 1979,[4] but Garriott did not expect that the public would see his work.[5]
When the game reached version D&D28b later that year (where "28b" refers to the revision), he demoed the game - now renamed to Akalabeth - for his boss at a Clear Lake City, Texas-area ComputerLand, who suggested he sell the game in the store. Garriott consented and spent $200 to package and sell the game for $20 inside Ziploc bags, with photocopied instructions and a cover drawn by his mother. It warned "BEWARE FOOLISH MORTAL, YOU TRESPASS IN AKALABETH, WORLD OF DOOM!!", and claimed to offer "10 different Hi-Res Monsters combined with perfect perspective and infinite dungeon levels". California Pacific Computer Company received a copy, and contacted Garriott to publish the game. Garriott flew to California with his parents and agreed to receive $5 for each copy sold. The retail price of the California Pacific version, with cover artwork by Denis Loubet, was $35; Garriot claims that the game sold 30,000 copies, with him receiving $150,000, and that Akalabeth had the best return on investment, with later games "all downhill from there". The company suggested that for marketing purposes "Lord British" be credited as the author, and organized a contest for Softalk readers to figure out his true identity.[3][6][5][7][8]
In creating Akalabeth, Garriott was primarily inspired by Dungeons & Dragons, for which he held weekly sessions in his parents' house while in high school;[2] and the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, which he received from an in-law of his brother. The name derives from Tolkien's Akallabêth, part of The Silmarillion; though the game is not based on Tolkien's story. In the original game, the last monster on the need-to-kill list is called "Balrog", like the demonic monsters from The Lord of the Rings, and unlike the later name for the monster in the Ultima games, Balron.
While not explicitly stated, Akalabeth is seen as the first game of the Ultima series, a very popular and influential series of role-playing video games. It was, therefore, included as part of the 1998 Ultima Collection where it officially picked up the nickname Ultima 0. The version in the Collection added CGA colors and MIDI. It ran on DOS, making it the first official port of the game to any system other than the Apple II, though an unofficial, fan-made PC version had circulated on the Internet since late 1995.
Copies of the original Akalabeth are much more rare than those of other games that sold fewer than 30,000 copies. Historian Jimmy Maher believes that Garriott is mistaken on the figure, as the game only appeared near the bottom of the Softalk's monthly list of the top 30 best-selling Apple II programs twice before being discontinued in 1982; by contrast Sierra On-Line's The Wizard and the Princess, which often appeared near the top of the list, sold 25,000 copies by mid-1982. Given California Pacific's high royalty rates he suggests that 10,000 copies might have been enough for Garriott to earn $150,000.[9][8]
Gameplay and technology
Garriott is the sole author of the game, with the exception of title artwork by Keith Zabalaoui.[10] The game attempts to bring the gameplay of pen-and-paper role-playing games to the computer platform.[2] The player receives quests from Lord British (Garriott's alter-ego and nickname since high school) to kill a succession of ten increasingly difficult monsters.
The majority of gameplay takes place in an underground dungeon, but there were also a simple above-ground world map and text descriptions to fill out the rest of the adventure. The player could visit the Adventure Shop to purchase food, weapons, a shield and a magic amulet; the player's statistics can also be viewed here.
The game used concepts that would later become standard in the Ultima series, including:[10]
- First-person gameplay in dungeons
- Requiring food to survive
- A top-down overhead world view
- Hotkeys used for commands
- The use of Elizabethan English
Garriott's earlier versions before D&D28b used an overhead view with ASCII characters representing items and monsters. However, after playing Escape, an early maze game for the Apple II, he instead decided to switch to a wire-frame, first-person view for the underground dungeon portions of the game,[2] the first computer role-playing game with such graphics.[11] The game asks the player to provide a "lucky number", which it uses as a random seed to procedurally generate the rest of the game, including dungeons and player stats; by using the same number the player can always return to a given world. (The Ultima Collection version removed this feature and only uses one dungeon design, while adding savegame.)[10]
While crude by modern standards, in 1980 Akalabeth's graphics and dungeon crawl gameplay mechanics were considered quite advanced, and the game attracted a large amount of attention. And, since Akalabeth was written in Applesoft BASIC, an interpreted language, it was a simple matter for users to modify the source code to suit their needs or desires. For example, the game's magic amulet, which occasionally did unpredictable things like turn a player into a high-powered Lizard Man, or a weak Toad, could be set for "Lizard Man" with every use, progressively increasing the player's strength to the point of virtual indestructibility. One could also set the player's statistics (normally randomly generated and fairly weak to start) to any level desired.
Release date
Most sources, including Garriott and Origin Systems, say that Akalabeth was created in the summer of 1979 after he graduated from high school, and sold that year in Ziploc bags. Maher believes that Garriott did not begin selling Akalabeth until the summer of 1980, after his first year of college. California Pacific widely released the game in 1980 with a 1980 copyright date, and Akalabeth first appeared on the Softalk top 30 list for the month of October 1980.[9][7]
Reception
The game was reviewed in 1982 in The Dragon #65 by Bruce Humphrey. Humphrey concluded that "Akalabeth is a poor cousin in relation to Wizardry and some of the other recent role-playing computer games."[12] Scorpia of Computer Gaming World, a fan of Ultima, agreed in 1991: "Bluntly, it wasn't all that terrific". She did, however, note that the game was the first to offer 3-D perspective dungeon graphics.[11] Historian Jimmy Maher in 2011 wrote that he was surprised by how much more "playable" the game was than Temple of Apshai. Despite lacking basic functionality like the ability to save progress, Maher stated that Akalabeth had "a remarkably forward-thinking, even player-friendly design for its era".[10]
References
- ↑ Barton, Matt: Dungeons and Desktops: The History of Computer Role-playing Games (A K Peters Ltd, Wellesley MA, 2008), pg. 1
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 King, Brad; Borland, John M. (2003). Dungeons and Dreamers: The Rise of Computer Game Culture from Geek to Chic. McGraw-Hill/Osborne. ISBN 0-07-222888-1. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
- 1 2 "Ultima and Lord British - Origins". The Dot Eaters. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- ↑ The Official Book of Ultima, by Shay Addams, Second Edition, page 7
- 1 2 Ferrell, Keith (January 1989). "Dungeon Delving with Richard Garriott". Compute!. p. 16. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
- ↑ The Official Book of Ultima, by Shay Addams, Second Edition, page 8
- 1 2 Maher, Jimmy (2011-12-12). "Lord British". The Digital Antiquarian. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- 1 2 Maher, Jimmy (2011-12-20). "California Pacific". The Digital Antiquarian. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- 1 2 Maher, Jimmy (2011-12-02). "A Word on Akalabeth and Chronology". The Digital Antiquarian. Retrieved 9 July 2014. See Garriott's post and Maher's response in the comments.
- 1 2 3 4 Maher, Jimmy (2011-12-18). "Akalabeth". The Digital Antiquarian. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- 1 2 Scorpia (October 1991). "C*R*P*G*S / Computer Role-Playing Game Survey". Computer Gaming World. p. 16. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
- ↑ Humphrey, Bruce (September 1982). "Campaigns for the Keyboard". The Dragon (65): 73–74.
External links
- Akalabeth: World of Doom at MobyGames
- The Ultima Collection version of Akalabeth: World of Doom can be played for free in the browser at the Internet Archive
- Akalabeth at the Codex of Ultima Wisdom
- GameSpot: "The Ultima Legacy - D&D28b and the Apple II"
- The Dot Eaters article on Gariott/British, Akalabeth, and his other Ultima games.
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