Multi-User Dungeon: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Ryan K. Gimson m (edited for title clarity) |
imported>Subpagination Bot m (Add {{subpages}} and remove any categories (details)) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{subpages}} | |||
A '''Multi-User Dungeon''' (or '''MUD''') is a game that is commonly meant as a text-based, multi-player [[computer game]] played online. Most MUDs are [[role-playing]] games, driven by a social chatroom structure. It could be argued that certain online graphics-based games such as [[World of Warcraft]] and [[Eve Online]] are actually MUDs. | A '''Multi-User Dungeon''' (or '''MUD''') is a game that is commonly meant as a text-based, multi-player [[computer game]] played online. Most MUDs are [[role-playing]] games, driven by a social chatroom structure. It could be argued that certain online graphics-based games such as [[World of Warcraft]] and [[Eve Online]] are actually MUDs. | ||
Line 10: | Line 12: | ||
;History | ;History | ||
*[http://www.brandeis.edu/pubs/jove/HTML/v2/keegan.html A Classification of MUDs] by Martin Keegan, Grandmaster Data Services Ltd, Cambridge, UK | *[http://www.brandeis.edu/pubs/jove/HTML/v2/keegan.html A Classification of MUDs] by Martin Keegan, Grandmaster Data Services Ltd, Cambridge, UK | ||
Revision as of 22:46, 10 November 2007
A Multi-User Dungeon (or MUD) is a game that is commonly meant as a text-based, multi-player computer game played online. Most MUDs are role-playing games, driven by a social chatroom structure. It could be argued that certain online graphics-based games such as World of Warcraft and Eve Online are actually MUDs.
History
The first MUD was Dungeon, created by Roy Trubshaw and Richard Bartle. This game was inspired by an interactive fiction of the same name, and the goal was to make something akin to a multi-user version of Dungeon, hence the name multi-user dungeon.
External Links
- General
- History
- A Classification of MUDs by Martin Keegan, Grandmaster Data Services Ltd, Cambridge, UK