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Grue (monster)A grue is a fictional predator from the Zork series of interactive fiction games by Infocom. The first mention of grues is the following, ominous sentence:
Further investigation (by asking the game) will reveal more about their nature:
This warning is not to be taken lightly. If the player fails to get back into the light, or activate a light source, death at the fangs of a grue follows promptly. Grues were invented to limit players' options when faced with unlit areas. Without them, a player might attempt to blunder about in the darkness, perhaps (for example) to reach a lighted area beyond a dark passage. The presence of grues ensures that such tactics will fail, and forces players to solve any light-related puzzles first. For comparison, Zork's predecessor, Adventure, used pits to achieve the same result. An adventurer who attempted to move about in darkness in that game invariably fell down a pit and died. Strangely, these pits could never be located once a light source had been acquired. Grues, on the other hand, create no such discontinuity by their absence. According to the Jargon File, Dave Lebling took the name from Jack Vance's "Dying Earth" fantasies, and the word is an archaic English verb meaning to shudder with fear (as in the still-current word "gruesome"). Grues are a staple of the hacker mythos. They have been adopted by several roguelike games, including Ancient Domains of Mystery (ADOM). Grues feature in each of the Zork games. They are never seen in any games of the main Zork series, as they are only able to be found in the dark. However in the game Sorceror, part of Zork's sister series, "Enchanter", it is possible to get a brief description in the following scene:
Also, in Zork: The Undiscovered Underground (a text game released in 1998), the player was able to see a grue and its appearance was described in detail. Grues are also present in the Kingdom of Loathing browser-based RPG, as a nocturnal fighting familiar. Zork Nemesis features a book titled "Interview with a Grue". Inside, there is a page with a photo, entirely black, with the caption, "A picture of a Grue in its natural habitat." External linkThe contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
How to see transparent copy 01-04-2007 01:21:04 |
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