Firstly, this game is called the last resort.

 


There are 3 games. I'm playing on game 000. 


 


Dark was mentioning about the whole resort worlds thing with regards to
before you get into space. Well I've just managed to get into space.


 


Below is a rough description of starshipp traders what it does and what you
can do. Like I said, the game is now referred too as the last resort.


 


If we can get a good amount of people to come play on this game then it
could certainly be good fun.


 


The Last Resort


March 1, 2015: What is The Last Resort and why should I play it? In very
obvious ways, TLR is a crude game. While there is a graphical client, it is
not necessary to play the game. TLR is free and can be played with a web
browser or simply by telnet. Using a web browser is not very immersive;
playing via telnet is difficult at first. You find yourself typing '?' a lot
for the command menu. 

TLR's strength is a gameplay balance that provides a platform for strategy
like few other games. Understanding it is slow at first, but once
understood, there are a relatively small number of mechanisms and objects
that can be used in a near-infinite number of ways. A recent predecessor of
TLR, Starship Traders, was described by a long-time player like this: First
it seems too complicated, then too simple. Then too complicated again. 

TLR suffers from a lack of human factors engineering and is even more
confusing as a result. Nothing is obvious to the first-time player. Even
when a new player figures out how to use the radio and ask someone what they
should be doing, they are likely to be told to 'Computrade'. Such a simple
answer to the mystery posed by such a complicated, abstract universe. Surely
that wasn't a satisfactory answer. 

But we will address that in due time. Suffice it to say, TLR is confusing,
text-based, and huge. 'How huge is it?', you might be wondering? The new
version of the game supports a universe of up to four million sectors and
rooms in size. There are over a million machines and ports, and over a
hundred thousand planets and pantries in a a game of that size. 

It will also support thousands of other players. 

The typical universe is divided into 1500+ distinct galaxies and hotels,
ranging in size from 125 sectors up to 16,000 rooms. Any one of those places
might harbor an enemy starship, attack starbases, or maybe an automatic
homing device that will attach itself to you as you enter, and start
broadcasting your location to the other player that placed it there. 

But back to the central question: why should you waste your time on this
game? First, a simple answer to a simple question. You probably shouldn't
play this game. But, who am I to decide? You'll have to make that decision
for yourself. Most players quit within a few minutes of logging in. They see
no appealing graphics, no music plays, and nothing makes sense to them
immediately. They move on to the next shiny thing. The first impression may
not be everything, but here it eliminates almost 90% of players. 

The other 10% starts to play, tentatively. Moving to another sector by
typing a sector number, Moving and Trading and with a machine by typing C
(for Computrade), testing the various commands in the menu that ? lists.
They move, they trade, they build a few milibots, they find an abandoned
pantry and lift some stuff out of it. The pantry takes the name of the
player, just as several of the machines had. And one MiniBar reported the
name of the last player to trade there, 42 hours ago. So? Another 5% of the
would-be players wander off to some other site or go mow the lawn. 

The last 5% continue to play. Some of them listen to the radio as other
players chat, occasionally using words and abbreviations that hold no
meaning. Maybe they figure out how to use the radio themselves and ask a few
questions. A few interesting things were discovered today. Perhaps half of
the remaining 5% will return tomorrow to poke around more. 

Our last 2% log in again. The game is still there, their character still
where it was left. There are a different set of other players on this time.
Some have various kinds of backpacks like 'Policepack' and 'Travelpack'.
Others, however, having launched into space, are flying starships. Their
ships have names 'Battleship', 'Stealth Destroyer' and 'Hyper Cruiser'. Our
newbie hero notices that he has the words 'Camo Fannypack' in front of his
title of 'Tourist+2'. The others have titles of 'Admiral+5', 'Predator+0',
and 'Minor Tyrant+7'. 

The new Tourist has quite an imagination and starts to see patterns in the
seemingly meaningless actions in the game... When he moves, his energy level
goes down. Energy is fuel that appears to be necessary to move around,
trade, among other uses. One of the numbers in 'Inventory' is the ratio of
microbots earned to fuel consumed. Further, new fuel is issued every hour.
This is a turn-based game and energy is the fuel that turns are measured in.
The energy can be used all at once in a single session, a little at a time,
or hoarded up for a marathon session some time in the future. Efficient use
of fuel is surely one of the keys to success in this game. 

However, computrading is the simplest and quickest way to make money in the
game. Did I say money? Even the local currency is confusing. The basic unit
of wealth is the industrial Microbot -- a tiny machine that was never
intended to be used as cash. Having actual inherent value, though, the
microbot has displaced traditional, government-issued, currency and is in
use whereever there is no controlling authority. 

Microbots retain their industrial uses, of course, and a few hundred of them
can be used, along with an amount of iron, to make small semi-autonomous
weapons called milibots. 

Huge quantities of microbots, and a large quantity of hardware, can even be
used to build securitybots. Securitybots can be configured to defend a room
-- or to attack anyone who enters the guarded room. Unless, of course, the
visitor is a gangmate. 

Any player can create a gang, and any unaligned player can apply for
membership in any gang that has a vacancy. 

Backpacks can be upgraded to augment their offensive or defensive military
prowess, their cargo capacity, their instruments, and even, with jetpacks,
their travel capabilities. Alas, as with all things, each type of upgrade is
a tradeoff against other capabilities. 

As you may have gathered, a new player starts out on a resort world as a
tourist. However, it's not a difficult thing to find your way to the
spaceport, trade in your gear for space equipment, and get launched into
space. From space, you can trade and earn even more microbots, build
starbases, augment your ship with all manner of weapons and equipment, as
well as start a search for other resort worlds. There are 25 such worlds in
total, 24 of which are randomly scattered throughout space... 

  _____  

In many games, there is a 'play nice' rule that applies to all in-game
actions, with the sometime exception of words. In TLR, things are quite the
opposite. There are no limits on in-game actions but freedom of speech is
somewhat limited by the second of our three rules: 

1) Play only your own character, only the number of aliases explicitly
permitted, and never, ever share accounts! The current limit is 4 characters
per person. 

2) Use no profanity or personal verbal obnoxiousness anywhere here --
including the radio, the message base, and graffiti. 

3) Violate no applicable law in your use of this system. 

That's it. You may have noted the peculiar absense of another common rule of
other games: bug exploits. 

Anything you do within the game that doesn't violate one of those three
rules is _not cheating_. If you find a bug in the game that lets you gain an
advantage without breaking one of our three rules, then exploiting that bug
is hereby explicitly permitted. 

A player who finds and uses a bug, especially to win or place highly in a
game, is greatly respected here. A player who wins such a game, then reports
how they did it in a story on the message board, will long be remembered in
the legends and lore of this place. 

While it is hoped that such exploits are reported, note that there is no
rule that requires it. Our permissive policy on bug exploits has served us
well over the years, and several game outcome-affecting bugs have been
discovered and fixed directly as a result of our bug-exploits-are-permitted
policy. 

  _____  


Connection information


Telnet to port 2323 of ioresort.com: 

telnet ioresort.com(70.91.186.149) 2323 

The Web Login Page of TLR <http://70.91.186.149:1081>  

 

TLR Survival Manual <http://www.starshiptraders.com/sst/tlrman.html>  

 

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