## Description
Jason Scott’s documentary about interactive fiction comes with two DVDs. The
first disc contains the main feature (itself featuring one big Choose-Your-
Own-Adventure interactive plot fork), while the second is dedicated to extras,
bonus footage and a DVD-ROM section featuring numerous freeware text
adventures with included interpreters for Linux, Macintosh and Windows,
including:
* Above and Beyond!, v 1.3
* Acheton, v1.005, Z-code translation v1.100228
* Across The Stars: The Ralckor Incident, release 3
* Adventure
* Ad Verbum, release 11
* Annoyotron, release 1
* Arrival, or Attack of the B-Movie Cliches v2
* Bad Machine, release 1.2
* Book and Volume, release 8
* Bronze, release 11
* Child’s Play, release 4
* Fallacy of Dawn, release 1.05
* The Dreamhold, release 5
* Earth and Sky Episode 1, release 2
* Earth and Sky Episode 2: Another Earth, Another Sky, release 2
* Earth and Sky Episode 3: Luminous Horizon, release 1
* Escapade!, release 3
* Everybody Dies, release 2
* Colditz Escape
* Sound of Him
* Friendly Foe, release 2
* Galatea, release 3
* Great-Great-Grandfather’s Gold
* Losing Your Grip, v5
* Hunter, in Darkness, release 4
* The King of Shreds and Patches, release 12
* LASH – Local Asynchronous Satellite Hookup, release 11
* The Lighthouse, release 2
* Necrotic Drift, release 1.03
* Pantomime, release 1.02
* Max Blaster and Doris de Lightning Against the Parrot Creatures of Venus, v1.0
* Piracy 2.0, release 1
* A Simple Theft (possibly corrupted?)
* A Simple Theft 2: A Simple Theftier, release 1 (an _exclusive_ release here)
* The Recruit, release 1.0
* Savoir Faire, release 8
* Shade, release 3
* Smuggler
* Spider and Web, release 4
* No Time To Squeal, release 1.3
* Till Death Makes a Monk-Fish Out of Me, release 1.1
* Violet, release 3
* Winchester’s Nightmare, release 5
* At Wit’s End, v1.4
* Raising the Flag on Mount Yo Momma, release 2
* and the complete set of amateur Eamon adventures.
Also included are numerous interpreter programs for the various platform-
independent virtual machines (TADS, Z-code, Hugo and Glulx) most of the
amateur games included were written for as well as Windows and Mac emulators
for the handful of Apple II and Amstrad CPC also present.