I'll need to pull out that book on making roguelikes in Javascript again, because while #rogule is scratching the roguelike itch enough not to lose days to nethack, it's also making me want to make my own.
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I'll need to pull out that book on making roguelikes in Javascript again, because while #rogule is scratching the roguelike itch enough not to lose days to nethack, it's also making me want to make my own.
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I'll need to pull out that book on making roguelikes in Javascript again, because while #rogule is scratching the roguelike itch enough not to lose days to nethack, it's also making me want to make my own.
@LilFluff That sounds like a fun book. Back when I was in school I resisted boredom by following a roguelike tutorial for C++
Ever since reading about Nethack: Falcon's Eye in a PC magazine back in the late 90s, Roguelikes have been a recurring addiction
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@LilFluff That sounds like a fun book. Back when I was in school I resisted boredom by following a roguelike tutorial for C++
Ever since reading about Nethack: Falcon's Eye in a PC magazine back in the late 90s, Roguelikes have been a recurring addiction
@squishymage42 the one I've got access to is Roguelike Development With Javascript by Andre Garzia. I started on it back in 2020, then got distracted by other shiny ideas. But I think I will pick it up again.
In my case I first ran across hack, back in the mid/late 80s, which then got my mom called on me because a local BBS teamed up with the local PD and looked at everyone who opened a post with the subject line, "Help with hack." Which left me *very* unamused.