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8 votes
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When will the Arctic see its first ice-free summer?
6 votes -
The champion who picked a date to die
6 votes -
New York’s subway map like you’ve never seen it before
20 votes -
UN Environment Climate Change Report
6 votes -
New Tricks For An Old Z-Machine, Part 3: A Renaissance Is Nigh
From the article: For all that Curses entranced me, however, I never came close to completing it. At some point I’d get bogged down by its combinatorial explosion of puzzles and places, by its...
From the article:
For all that Curses entranced me, however, I never came close to completing it. At some point I’d get bogged down by its combinatorial explosion of puzzles and places, by its long chains of dependencies where a single missed or misplaced link would lock me out of victory without my realizing it, and I’d drift away to something else. Eventually, I just stopped coming back altogether.
I was therefore curious and maybe even slightly trepiditious to revisit Curses for this article some two decades after I last attempted to play it. How would it hold up? The answer is, better than I feared but somewhat worse than I might have hoped.
[...]
[Curses] was designed, like his beloved Crowther and Woods Adventure, to be a place which you came back to again and again, exploring new nooks and crannies as the fancy took you. If you actually wanted to solve the thing… well, you’d probably need to get yourself a group for that.
[...]
All of which is to say that, even as it heralded a new era in interactive fiction which would prove every bit as exciting as what had come before, Curses became the last great public world implemented as a single-player text adventure.
5 votes -
The fisherman's secret
5 votes -
The 1619 Project by the New York Times
4 votes -
Survival by degrees: 389 bird species on the brink
3 votes -
The most detailed map of auto emissions in America
5 votes -
Half a century of dither and denial – a climate crisis timeline
4 votes -
The internet is overrun with images of child sexual abuse. What went wrong?
18 votes -
Dungeon crawling or lucid dreaming?
9 votes -
What college admissions offices really want - Elite schools say they’re looking for academic excellence and diversity. But their thirst for tuition revenue means that wealth trumps all
10 votes -
Sayonara Wild Hearts | Launch trailer (releases September 19)
5 votes -
The elements
8 votes -
Plundering Cambodia's forests
6 votes -
Queers in Love at the End of the World: A ten-second game
9 votes -
American capitalism is brutal. You can trace that to the plantation
16 votes -
Millennials - Interactive infographic by Goldman Sachs
11 votes -
Losing the eternal blue sky: Meet a changing Mongolia. Rivers are dry. Pastureland is giving way to mines. And wintertime smog obscures the famed blue sky. How did the country get here?
7 votes -
One day, one city, no relief - twenty-four hours inside San Francisco’s homelessness crisis
7 votes -
Notre-Dame came far closer to collapsing than people knew. This is how it was saved.
14 votes -
Women’s pockets are inferior
20 votes -
Apollo 11 in real time
6 votes -
We read 150 privacy policies. They were an incomprehensible disaster.
17 votes -
How will the movies (as we know them) survive the next ten years? Twenty-four major Hollywood figures peer into the future
7 votes -
Good, evil, ugly, beautiful: Make a ‘Game of Thrones’ chart
5 votes -
Gun violence has sharply declined in California's Bay Area. What happened?
8 votes -
Going critical - an interactive essay demonstrating how things move and spread through networks
4 votes -
Decade in the red: Trump tax figures show over $1 billion in business losses from 1985 to 1994
11 votes -
How America’s oldest gun maker went bankrupt: A financial engineering mystery
8 votes -
Your questions about food and climate change, answered
6 votes -
Every Noise at Once - An interactive visualization of Spotify music genres
9 votes -
Why Budapest, Warsaw, and Lithuania split themselves in two
11 votes -
Photopia's Maze: A Moment of Perfect Beauty
5 votes -
Appl still hasn’t fixd its MacBook kyboad problm
23 votes -
Climate chaos is coming and the Pinkertons are ready
13 votes -
Mapped: The world’s coal power plants
12 votes -
How Rupert Murdoch's empire of influence remade the world - a three part report covering the UK, Australia and the USA
19 votes -
How the internet travels across oceans
8 votes -
The rise and rise of populist rhetoric. Major study analysing speeches of leaders from 40 countries over two decades shows surge in populism
7 votes -
The new ‘dream home’ should be a condo
20 votes -
The last generation
7 votes -
America's professional elite: Wealthy, successful and miserable
24 votes -
Dollars on the margins - $15/hr minimum wage as a US public health measure
17 votes -
Explore the Pearl River Delta megalopolis
4 votes -
The fight for gender equality in big-wave surfing, one of the most dangerous sports on earth
5 votes -
The Knight Foundation commissioned a study to analyze bot accounts that spread fake news on Twitter. This is what they found.
13 votes -
Death and valor on a warship doomed by its own Navy - An investigation into the crash of the USS Fitzgerald
6 votes