Snipes (video game)

Snipes (diminutive for Snipers) is a text-mode networked computer game that was created in 1983 by SuperSet Software. Snipes is officially credited as being the original inspiration for NetWars.[1][2] It was one of the earliest text mode multi player games, running on Novell NetWare systems.

Snipes
Screenshot
Developer(s)Drew Major
Dale Neibaur
Mark Hurst
Kyle Powell
Stable release
v1.0 / 1983
Operating systemNovell NetWare, MS-DOS
TypeMaze
Websitewww.novell.com

Gameplay

The objective of the game is to control your creature by moving it around a maze to destroy snipes and their hives, and/or destroy other networked players.

The player must first specify the number of snipes, hives and difficulty before they play. Each game is different because the computer generates a random new maze.

The creature is moved using the keyboard arrow keys and shoots in different directions with the A, S, D and W keys. By combining keys, diagonal movement and shooting can be achieved. Pressing the spacebar can provide extra velocity to run away from difficult situations from the snipes.

Several level options are available. First, a letter is chosen, which controls the environment settings: what bad guys are available, their accuracy at attacking, whether or not the player's diagonal shots bounce off walls, whether running into a wall will simply block or kill you, and whether the hives have a partial resistance to snipes' shots. The next choice is a number, which controls the maximum number of snipes that may exist, how many hives are initially created within the maze, and how many lives the player is given.

Technical details

A requirement to play the multiplayer version of Snipes is that all users share a common network drive. It suggests that the various clients communicate to each other via shared file. The exact implementation details of this are not known but experiments have shown that Snipes can be played between Windows workstations in a Command Prompt window under Windows XP, provided that each user maps a drive to the executable location with read/write rights. This also implies that IPX is not directly used by Snipes to communicate between clients.

Legacy

A newer implementation of the game was developed and shipped with NetWare Lite 1.1 in September 1991.[3] Its NLSNIPES.EXE executable had a filesize of less than 18 KB. It was replaced by the NetWars 2.06 game, that came bundled with Personal NetWare 1.0 and Novell DOS 7 since late 1993.

In July 2016, a port of the original Snipes to the Simple Direct Media Layer became available. The port was done by reverse engineering the original code and permission was granted by Drew Major and Kyle Powell[4] to make it public. The C++ source code is available at GitHub.[5]

Clones were released for Linux[6] and Android.[7]

gollark: Why even have separate chats for time of day?
gollark: YOU should listen to the FTL: Faster than Light soundtrack for purposes.
gollark: I mean, mine does simultaneous equations, perhaps you have the mildly worse model.
gollark: You have a calculator, no?
gollark: I found out ages ago that you can rewrite them as simultaneous equations and then just solve them by calculator. Alternatively, you can write the quantity of each element in each term to help with the "directed guessing" method as ghost said.

See also

References

  1. "Snipes! « Tribute to Text-Mode Games". Textmodegames.com. 2010-09-17. Archived from the original on 2016-07-28. Retrieved 2016-08-08.
  2. http://www.textmodegames.com/download/4613315.pdf%5B%5D
  3. "Upgrade to NetWare Lite 1.1 for DOS and Win". Novell. 1995-11-03. 1203078. Archived from the original on 2018-05-10. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
  4. "Snipes ported to C/C++ with 100% logic compatibility and replay recording". www.vogons.org. Archived from the original on 2018-05-10. Retrieved 2016-08-25.
  5. "Snipes". github.com.
  6. "Linux port". Archived from the original on 2015-10-24. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  7. http://www.bdesigncorp.com
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