You might try:
https://www.pcjs.org/software/pcx86/sw/misc/pcsig08/


On Thu, 28 Jan 2021, Nathaniel Schmidt wrote:

Hi Jude,

Interesting.  Do you know whether the code is open source and where I can
access it?

Nathaniel

========================================
Nathaniel Schmidt
Undergraduate student
Bachelor of Computer Science (S306)
School of Information Technology
Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment
Deakin University, Melbourne (Burwood) campus
https://sync.deakin.edu.au/profiles/student/njschmidt/

E: [email protected]
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/njsch/
GitHub: https://github.com/njsch/
Skype: nathaniel_schmidt1994
about.me/njschmidt/

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of
Jude DaShiell
Sent: Thursday, 28 January 2021 2:15 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [blind-gamers] Re-introducing Camel

That's a game written in basic called desert.bas.  I played that game and
won it once.



On Wed, 27 Jan 2021, Nathaniel Schmidt wrote:

Hi all,



Not sure whether some of you may remember a game from within the last
decade
or two (probably the latter) called Camel.  According to Louis Bryant,
it
was an old MS-Dos console game although I can't find any online sources
on
this at least.  The object of the game was to successfully ride your
camel
through the desert without dying.  You had a select number of drinks in
your
canteen, a certain of number of days you could travel without resting
and a
certain number of commands / moves before you had to stop to drink or
take a
rest.  There were also other obstacles to overcome such as sandstorms
and
in
the original game, you were being chased by a bunch of pigmies who were
basically portrayed as cannibals who would eat you if you got caught.



It was ported to the BrailleNote Classic / mPower in the course of time
but
almost went out of existence when BrailleSoft went off the grid.  There
is
an old copy of it on the audio games archive but I have no idea if it
even
works any more and the AGA website is not really liked very much by some
good-quality antivirus software solutions anyway which is rather
annoying
and arguably a little suspicious.  The game code on the website for the
programming language the game was written in also does not compile
properly
when you invoke the language compiler, which is also a bit of a bummer.



So if anyone is interested, I have attempted to re-write the game,
translating it from Rapid Euphoria to Python which means that it is now
cross-platform and will run on Windows, Mac and Linux.  I hope that this
will provide an easier (and much safer) means of obtaining the game if
people want it.  Sorry if this bursts anyone's bubble but I should
probably
point out that I have changed all potentially racist references to
Pigmies
and Berbers, replacing them with more ecologically appropriate options
such
as ravenous hyenas and general references to crazy kidnappers.
Potentially,
the reference to pigmies in particular could be partially justified if
it
was supposed to be a reference to Greek-mythological characters but I'm
pretty sure it is meant to be a reference to the actual Ethiopian ethnic
minority.  I also removed the reference to the Gobi Desert which, as an
Asiatic reference, carelessly does not even correlate with the two-fold
African ethnic references the game used to have anyway and is simply an
excuse to have fun at others' expense.



The game still needs a bit of work.  At the moment I think it is way too
slow-paced and makes it not as interesting.  It takes too long to get to
the
25-30 mile maximum limit where the hyenas start chasing you and bad
stuff
happens too often which means that you die too easily.  I am actually
not
sure yet as to whether my rendition of the game makes it mathematically
possible to win the game.  But if anyone would like to test it out, I
would
be happy to hear any suggestions you may have to offer.



The Alpha pre-release of version 1.0 can be found at the following link
-
just download the zip archive, extract all the files in the contained
folder, keep the files in the same location when extracting and then run
the
file camel.exe.  If you get a pop-up blocker from Windows smart screen
then
just press enter or space on "more options / actions" and then activate
"run
anyway".

https://github.com/njsch/camel/files/5879037/camel.zip



If you don't trust me with unsigned binaries and are worried about
unsolicited content, you can always run the program straight from source
-
all code is in one file:

https://raw.githubusercontent.com/njsch/camel/main/camel.py



Enjoy.



Regards,



Nathaniel



========================================

Nathaniel Schmidt

Undergraduate student

Bachelor of Computer Science (S306)

School of Information Technology

Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment

Deakin University, Melbourne (Burwood) campus

https://sync.deakin.edu.au/profiles/student/njschmidt/



E: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/njsch/

GitHub: https://github.com/njsch/

Skype: nathaniel_schmidt1994

about.me/njschmidt/ <https://about.me/njschmidt/>























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