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・ Sword hunt
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・ Sword Master (video game)
・ Sword of al-Sham Brigades
・ Sword of Aragon
・ Sword of Attila
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Sword of Fargoal
・ Sword of Freedom
・ Sword of Gideon
・ Sword of God (novel)
・ Sword of Goujian
・ Sword of Honour
・ Sword of Honour (disambiguation)
・ Sword of Honour (film)
・ Sword of Honour (miniseries)
・ Sword of Honour (Pakistan)
・ Sword of Honour (video game)
・ Sword of justice
・ Sword of Justice (TV series)
・ Sword of Kahless
・ Sword of Kas


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Sword of Fargoal : ウィキペディア英語版
Sword of Fargoal

''Sword of Fargoal'' is a 1982 video game by Jeff McCord, published by Epyx. The November 1996 anniversary issue of ''Computer Gaming World'' listed ''Sword of Fargoal'' as #147 on the "Top 150 Best Video Games of All Time."〔(''Computer Gaming World'': 150 Best Games of All Time ) from CDAccess.com〕
==Development==

''Sword of Fargoal'' was created by author and programmer Jeff McCord and based on his original dungeon adventure, ''Gammaquest II,'' which was programmed in BASIC for the Commodore PET computer and written in 1979-1981 while he was still in high school in Lexington, Kentucky. ''Gammaquest II'' created randomly generated dungeons that were revealed piece-by-piece as the character explored the map, and stayed "lit" behind the character as it moved, emulating the "mapping" of a dungeon level. The game graphics, however, were limited to the character set of the computer.〔(Official ''Sword of Fargoal'' website )〕
McCord accepted an offer to publish the game from the video game developer and publisher Epyx in 1982 on the Commodore VIC-20. His original name for the new version was ''Sword of Fargaol'', deriving the name from the Old English spelling of jail (''gaol''), but his producer at Epyx, Susan Lee-Merrow, convinced him to change it to its present form.〔
The following year, with the release of the Commodore 64 (C64), McCord was asked to release a version of ''Sword of Fargoal'' for that machine as well. McCord was unable to implement the conversion as it was written in BASIC, and the sprite-based graphics required machine language programming. McCord's friend, Scott Corsaire (then Carter) and Steve Lepisto wrote all the machine language code that was needed so that game would perform fast enough for the C64 version of the game (including the main redrawing of the dungeon levels, clearing of the screen in a spiral pattern effect, monster AI, collision detection, and joystick control).
''Sword of Fargoal'' is a roguelike game, with the player controlling an adventurous warrior attempting to reclaim the "Sword of Fargoal" from the depths of a monster-infested, treasure-stocked, randomly generated dungeon. The Sword is placed randomly somewhere between the fifteenth and twentieth dungeon level. This so-called "Sword Level" also has the unique characteristic of being a randomly generated, twisty maze of single tile-width passages, rather than a conventional dungeon level like the others. This helped make reaching the "Sword Level" an exciting event in the game-play; once the player sees the maze design, they know the Sword is nearby.
''Sword of Fargoal'' is noteworthy for being one of the first microcomputer games to introduce elements later used by so-called roguelike games, such as dungeons that are randomly generated for each session of play, and gave a nod to earlier games such as ''Colossal Cave Adventure,'' which was played without graphics on mainframe computers of the day using Unix terminals.
''Sword of Fargoal'' has remained somewhat notorious within C64 fandom as being extremely difficult to win. Due to the random design of the "Sword Level," it is possible that the player may enter it with no way of actually reaching the Sword room, and he or she must exit and return to that level for another chance. Further, once the Sword was claimed by the player, they have exactly 2,000 seconds (33 minutes and 20 seconds) to escape the dungeon by going back through each level, or the Sword would be destroyed by a curse. Of course, since all levels are newly generated when the player returns to them, they must be fully explored to find the correct staircases leading upward, of which there is usually only one per level on this return trip. Complicating matters further was the fact that if the Sword was lost for any reason (such as being stolen by a wandering foe), the player must return to the level he or she originally found the Sword to reclaim it, and the clock did not stop or reset when this occurred.
The game was originally released on computer cassette tape and 5¼" floppy disk formats. An open source remake exists in both PC and Macintosh versions. An iPhone version was also released in December 2009.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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