This one might be interesting to anyone interested in computer gaming history.

https://dec10.uknet.net

I spent the last couple of weeks finally finishing a project I started for Bletchley Park about 20 years ago. Recreating the original MUD and MIST on a mirror of the original Essex University system that finally closed in 1991.

Roy Trubshaw and Richard Bartle wrote the first online multi-user game (MUD) on Essex University's DECSystem-10 in 1978 and it ran till I closed it in 1991. I diligently backed everything up so I could potentially recover it one day, but as far as I can see, all the DECSystem-10's went to the great scrapyard in the sky, my backups were mostly stolen when my first museum was stolen, and I had huge issues recovering the Essex BCPL compiler to compile what I had left when I finally got a decent TOPS-10 emulator running on a VAX for Bletchley Park.

One good thing about being an unemployable whistleblower is free time, so I finally hunkered down to some 90 hour weeks and built a software replica of the Essex system I think reflects it well. It's running on a KS10 not a KL10 but I had to let some things slip.

I put the latest known versions of MUD and MIST on it, and miraculously found ROCK too.

So, to meander to the point, if you want to see and relive exactly what online multi user gaming was like from 1978 to 1991, you can go to:

https://dec10.uknet.net

Or:

telnet telnet.dec10.uknet.net

(Port 2653 is available for ISPs that block 23)

And then follow the terse instructions from there.

In those days, you were generally faced with a "." prompt and left mostly alone, so for authenticity, I will leave it at that.

I should note that although they were, in their day, wildly popular games with a relatively huge community, this is a museum peice in snapshot-form at the moment. But I will leave them up and running to see what happens and as a useful reference. I wasn't going to, but Richard seemed happy to have MUD running, and former MIST players wanted it back, so...

Pop this a share if you know folks who might be interested.

** Update: New web client that works better.

** Another update - I added a telnet client.

Historically, the telnet connection is much more true to the traditional experience, where you were connecting to a working machine that didn't care about the MUD Guests, so there were no pointers at all. Just rumour and hearsay :)

If any of you Unix/Security people notice I messed up something, please tell me. I left "^], !sh" open on the telnet link for about 2 minutes and nearly had a heart-attack once I spotted it :D

#history #digital #retrogaming #retrocomputing #games #mud #muds #mist #rock #computers #emulation #emulators #vms #tops10 #museum #history #bletchleypark #simh #essex #uk #computinghistory #36bit #engineering #Linux #Security

(don't try this on a phone!)

ttyd - Terminal

@lorry love that this has been done. It inspired me to build a poor imitation at Coventry Polytechnic in 1985 we christened “Fantarzuk” and I still have the source code sitting around today somewhere, just none of the data files it ran from.

#HertonThePlacid #Goodgulf #coventryPolytechnic #Fantarzuk

@gulfie Ooh, I thought I knew all the UK games! one to add to my list :)

My first one was called MUCK from 1983/1984 running on PRIMOS on a Prime 2250 - It was great, brilliant game-play design (mostly not by me, and Neil Burgess is no longer with us) and I think a pretty innovative multi-user mechanism (I did write that bit :P) - But each move took about 45 seconds, so as people said, it may as well just be a tabletop game that happened to be running on a minicomputer. Humph.

@lorry some of the very smart cookies in CompSci (I was electronics) put together a kinda social network - list of logged in users down the left side, you could chat with an individual or as part of a group, all written on a Harris 800 (no idea what language they used for that).

One of my lab technicians was William JG Overington who invented the concept of Telesoftware (the code you could download from Teletext if you had more money than sense and the adapter for the BBC micro).

@gulfie I worked with a lot of the old Prestel/Micronet/Compunet people in my days at BTnet - There were some great people from that era still hanging around at BT!

Compunet ran a very early of MUD (so did Compuserve, confusing isn't it!) on their DecSystem 10s too.

#UK #BT #Prestel #Micronet

@lorry I did my industrial training in the videotext research department at Martlesham Heath in ‘86. The team still had the original Prestel prototype - several large boards of wire wrapped TTL in a wooden box with a keyboard at the front and a row of 4” fans across the back. I played with their early Cable TV system at Westminster Cable they weren’t supposed to deploy, and did a bit of research programming for them, can’t remember what for though. First experience of VMS.
@gulfie I had a desk and mailbox at Martlesham but I only ever went there once. I went through a phase of seeing how many desks I could get in the company.
@lorry took me 9 months to get a phone on my desk. It was a standing joke. Phone arrived a couple of days before I finished my placement 🤣