This repository contains the source code for a 1977 version of Zork, an interactive fiction game created at MIT by Tim Anderson, Marc Blank, Bruce Daniels, and Dave Lebling. The files are a part of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Tapes of Tech Square (ToTS) collection at the MIT Libraries Department of Distinctive Collections (DDC).
The files within this directory are the Zork specific files from the 100068.tap
tape image file within the /tots/recovered/vol7
directory of the ToTS collection. Most files are written in the MDL programming language and were originally created on a PDP-10 timeshare computer running the ITS operating system.
The files were extracted from the tape image using the itstar program. The filenames have been adapted to Unix conventions, as per the itstar translation. The original filename syntax would be formatted like, LCF; ACT1 37
, for example. All files have been placed into this artificial zork directory for organizational purposes.
The lcf
and madman
directories contain the source code for the game.
The act2.27
and dung.56
files outside of the two main directories, are the decrypted versions of act2z.27
and dungz.56
. The decrypted versions were created recently and added to this directory by DDC digital archivist, Joe Carrano, for researcher ease of access.
Files with extensions .nbin
and .save
are binary compiled files.
There was a zork.log
file within the madman
directory that detailed who played Zork at the time of creation. DDC excluded this file from public release to protect the privacy of those named.
This file is metadata about the Zork files, using the CodeMeta Project schema.
This file is the readme detailing the content and context for this repository.
A file tree listing the files in the zork
directory showing the original file timestamps as extracted from the tape image.
[filename], Zork source code, 1977, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Tapes of Tech Square (ToTS) collection, MC-0741. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Distinctive Collections, Cambridge, Massachusetts. swh:1:dir:2960204c42f79d203ec7da2e4abdc1e3e00a84e6
Thanks to Lars Brinkhoff for help with identifying these files and with extracting them using the itstar program mentioned above.