IfMUD
1997 video game
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ifMUD is a MUD associated with the rec.arts.int-fiction newsgroup accessible via telnet or a MUD client. It is central to the interactive fiction community, frequented by many of the genre's best-known writers.[1][2] Every year, the XYZZY Awards are hosted on ifMUD during an online ceremony.[3]
| ifMUD | |
|---|---|
| Developers | Liza Daly and project community |
| Engine | PerlMUD |
| Platform | Platform independent |
| Release | 1997 |
| Genre | Interactive fiction MUD |
| Mode | Multiplayer |
ifMUD was founded in 1997 by Liza Daly.[1] It is written in the Perl computer programming language making use of an extensive hack of the earlier PerlMUD, with many additional features.[1]
Game characteristics
Innovations
The tradition of SpeedIF, in which short interactive fiction works, created around story prompts, are developed and shared in a two-hour timeframe, was originated on ifMUD by David Cornelson.[5]
MUD bots
Two major bots exist on ifMUD, Alex and Floyd.
Floyd acts as an interpreter for many different IF writing platforms. It was named after a fictional character from the Planetfall game by Infocom.[6]
Alex, a "parrot" bot named after Alex Pepperberg, keeps track of memos on any topic, editable by anyone, similar to a wiki. It was written by Dan Shiovitz and was inspired by the Perl infobot Purl.