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posted by n1 on Saturday May 23 2015, @03:30AM   Printer-friendly
from the so-it-wasn't-cod:mw? dept.

It started as an experiment. Steve Colley had just figured out how to rotate a cube on the screen when Howard Palmer suggested they could make a three-dimensional maze.

The year was 1973. They were high school seniors in a work-study program with NASA, tasked with testing the limits of the Imlac PDS-1 and PDS-4 minicomputers. Their maze program flickered into life with simple wireframe graphics and few of the trappings of modern games. You could walk around in first person, looking for a way out of the maze, and that's about it. There were no objects or virtual people. Just a maze.

But Maze would evolve over the summer and the years that followed. Soon two people could occupy the maze together, connected over separate computers. Then they could shoot each other and even peek around corners. Before long, up to eight people could play in the same maze, blasting their friends across the ARPANET — a forebear to the internet. Two decades before id Software changed the game industry with Wolfenstein 3D and Doom, Colley, Palmer and MIT students Greg Thompson and Dave Lebling invented the first-person shooter.

This is the story of Maze, the video game that lays claim to perhaps more "firsts" than any other — the first first-person shooter, the first multiplayer networked game, the first game with both overhead and first-person view modes, the first game with modding tools and more.

http://www.polygon.com/features/2015/5/21/8627231/the-first-first-person-shooter

 
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  • (Score: 2) by ticho on Saturday May 23 2015, @09:06AM

    by ticho (89) on Saturday May 23 2015, @09:06AM (#186807) Homepage Journal

    Perhaps they're more above the whole silly tempest in a teapot about "ethics in gaming journalism" than you are, and can appreciate a good piece about computer history for what it is.

    I am kind of disappointed with comments here, though, most of them are off-topic, about controversial stuff. Looks like SN is sinking into the internet muck faster and faster.

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  • (Score: 2) by linuxrocks123 on Saturday May 23 2015, @05:17PM

    by linuxrocks123 (2557) on Saturday May 23 2015, @05:17PM (#186902) Journal

    I totally agree. It's a sign of the upcoming Apocalypse, where Lennart Poettering and Obama will lead the forces of darkness in the final battle against Rand Paul and the Veteran Unix Administrators collective. This will happen very soon now. But afterwards, after the forces of light slay SystemD in battle, Init will descend from heaven to rule Earth for 1000 years in a glorious reign of Linux and ponies.

    So SoylentNews should get better if you just wait a while.