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Responsible for a lot of wasted time at Ames, where engineers were supposed to be designing the Space Shuttle. Ames alumnus Greg Thompson took it to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974, where the robots and a [[LevelEditor maze editor]] were added. Later ported to the Xerox Alto workstation, UsefulNotes/AppleMacintosh, [=NeXT=], and Palm Pilot.

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Responsible for a lot of wasted time at Ames, where engineers were supposed to be designing the Space Shuttle. Ames alumnus Greg Thompson took it to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974, where the robots and a [[LevelEditor maze editor]] were added. Later ported to the Xerox Alto workstation, UsefulNotes/AppleMacintosh, Platform/AppleMacintosh, [=NeXT=], and Palm Pilot.
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* FauxFirstPerson3D: The game use lines against a blank background to simulate 3D images of walls, corridors, and turns to make the player think they're looking at a maze from a wanderers perspective. This is all done without a single polygon more than a decade before ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros'' came out.

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* FauxFirstPerson3D: The game use lines against a blank background to simulate 3D images of walls, corridors, and turns to make the player think they're looking at a maze from a wanderers perspective. This is all done without a single polygon more than a decade before ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros'' ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros1'' came out.
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* VectorGame: One of the first games to use vector graphics to simulate a three-dimensional layout. ''VideoGame/StarFox'', eat your heart out.

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* VectorGame: One of the first games to use vector graphics to simulate a three-dimensional layout. ''VideoGame/StarFox'', eat your heart out.

Added: 241

Changed: 2075

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* FacelessEye: The player avatars.
* FauxFirstPerson3D: The UrExample.
* FirstPersonShooter: The UrExample.
* {{Hitscan}}

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* FacelessEye: In later editions, The player avatars.
controls a single disembodied eye moving about the maze. Obviously you can't tell when playing alone, but when you see other players, they're represented by the floating eye.
* FauxFirstPerson3D: The UrExample.
game use lines against a blank background to simulate 3D images of walls, corridors, and turns to make the player think they're looking at a maze from a wanderers perspective. This is all done without a single polygon more than a decade before ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros'' came out.
* FirstPersonShooter: Your one functionality besides moving was the ability to shoot enemies, whether they be other players or NPC robots. Like later entries in the genre, the game uses {{Hitscan}}, awards and deducts points according to your kills and deaths, and even has a primitive system for taking cover.
* {{Hitscan}}: While there is a graphic for the bullet you fire, the game registers a hit if your target is in the direction you're facing automatically.
The UrExample.
* {{Hitscan}}
bullet has no hitbox and is just there for show.



* LevelEditor: Added at MIT. May be the UrExample.
* NoPlotNoProblem
* OneHitPointWonder: Everybody.

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* LevelEditor: Added The guys at MIT.MIT added an editor where players could create their own mazes to play in. May be the UrExample.
* NoPlotNoProblem
MercyInvincibility: You get a couple of seconds after being gunned down where you can't be shot again, presumably to keep an experienced player from totally overwhelming someone not as familiar with the layout.
* NoPlotNoProblem: There's nothing like a story here. Why are you a floating eyeball holding a gun in a maze? You exist to help engineers pass the time, that's all.
* OneHitPointWonder: Everybody.All it takes is a single bullet to kill you. You won't see regenerating health known from ''VideoGame/{{Halo}}'' or ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty'' or even health bars you'd see in ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' and its many imitators.



* RoamingEnemy: The robots.
* ScoringPoints
* TakeCover: Probably the UrExample.
* VectorGame

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* RoamingEnemy: The robots.
robots aren't stationary, they actually wander the maze and hunt you down. They function the same as a human player and have the same abilities (shooting and ducking behind cover, mainly).
* ScoringPoints
ScoringPoints: The more times you shoot your opponent(s), the more points you get. If you get hit yourself, you lose points.
* TakeCover: Probably the UrExample.
UrExample. Decades before ''VideoGame/GearsOfWar'' and every other shooter on the Xbox 360, this game allowed players to peek out of corners to see what's coming after you. Unlike later games using this trope, you can't shoot even blindly while in cover.
* VectorGameVectorGame: One of the first games to use vector graphics to simulate a three-dimensional layout. ''VideoGame/StarFox'', eat your heart out.
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* HitScan

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* HitScan{{Hitscan}}
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Responsible for a lot of wasted time at Ames, where engineers were supposed to be designing the Space Shuttle. Ames alumnus Greg Thompson took it to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974, where the robots and a [[LevelEditor maze editor]] were added. Later ported to the Xerox Alto workstation, AppleMacintosh, [=NeXT=], and Palm Pilot.

to:

Responsible for a lot of wasted time at Ames, where engineers were supposed to be designing the Space Shuttle. Ames alumnus Greg Thompson took it to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974, where the robots and a [[LevelEditor maze editor]] were added. Later ported to the Xerox Alto workstation, AppleMacintosh, UsefulNotes/AppleMacintosh, [=NeXT=], and Palm Pilot.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Responsible for a lot of wasted time at Ames, where engineers were supposed to be designing the Space Shuttle. Ames alumni Greg Thompson took it to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974, where the robots and a [[LevelEditor maze editor]] were added. Later ported to the Xerox Alto workstation, AppleMacintosh, [=NeXT=], and Palm Pilot.

to:

Responsible for a lot of wasted time at Ames, where engineers were supposed to be designing the Space Shuttle. Ames alumni alumnus Greg Thompson took it to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1974, where the robots and a [[LevelEditor maze editor]] were added. Later ported to the Xerox Alto workstation, AppleMacintosh, [=NeXT=], and Palm Pilot.
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[[quoteright:195:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mazewar_3217.jpg]]''Maze War'' is the UrExample of the FirstPersonShooter, written by Steve Colley and Howard Palmer on [[MainframesAndMinicomputers Imlac PDS-1 minicomputers]] at UsefulNotes/{{NASA}}'s Ames Research Center in 1973. It is a FauxFirstPerson3D, network-based PlayerVersusPlayer, realtime FPS. Each player controls a FacelessEye, wandering around the maze shooting the other players or computer-controlled robots. They also have an overhead view of the maze, showing their location, but not the other players. Players and robots alike could TakeCover and peek around corners without getting shot. Players [[ScoringPoints scored points]] for kills. If they were shot, they were deducted some points and transported to a random location in the maze.

to:

[[quoteright:195:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mazewar_3217.jpg]]''Maze War'' is the UrExample of the FirstPersonShooter, written by Steve Colley and Howard Palmer on [[MainframesAndMinicomputers [[UsefulNotes/MainframesAndMinicomputers Imlac PDS-1 minicomputers]] at UsefulNotes/{{NASA}}'s Ames Research Center in 1973. It is a FauxFirstPerson3D, network-based PlayerVersusPlayer, realtime FPS. Each player controls a FacelessEye, wandering around the maze shooting the other players or computer-controlled robots. They also have an overhead view of the maze, showing their location, but not the other players. Players and robots alike could TakeCover and peek around corners without getting shot. Players [[ScoringPoints scored points]] for kills. If they were shot, they were deducted some points and transported to a random location in the maze.
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[[quoteright:195:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mazewar_3217.jpg]]''Maze War'' is the UrExample of the FirstPersonShooter, written by Steve Colley and Howard Palmer on [[MainframesAndMinicomputers Imlac PDS-1 minicomputers]] at {{NASA}}'s Ames Research Center in 1973. It is a FauxFirstPerson3D, network-based PlayerVersusPlayer, realtime FPS. Each player controls a FacelessEye, wandering around the maze shooting the other players or computer-controlled robots. They also have an overhead view of the maze, showing their location, but not the other players. Players and robots alike could TakeCover and peek around corners without getting shot. Players [[ScoringPoints scored points]] for kills. If they were shot, they were deducted some points and transported to a random location in the maze.

to:

[[quoteright:195:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mazewar_3217.jpg]]''Maze War'' is the UrExample of the FirstPersonShooter, written by Steve Colley and Howard Palmer on [[MainframesAndMinicomputers Imlac PDS-1 minicomputers]] at {{NASA}}'s UsefulNotes/{{NASA}}'s Ames Research Center in 1973. It is a FauxFirstPerson3D, network-based PlayerVersusPlayer, realtime FPS. Each player controls a FacelessEye, wandering around the maze shooting the other players or computer-controlled robots. They also have an overhead view of the maze, showing their location, but not the other players. Players and robots alike could TakeCover and peek around corners without getting shot. Players [[ScoringPoints scored points]] for kills. If they were shot, they were deducted some points and transported to a random location in the maze.

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