GitHub - kilobyte/el-ixir at debian
Skip to content

kilobyte/el-ixir

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

67 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

EL-IXIR

El-Ixir is a two-player same-computer game (although it is possible to use a shared tmux for remote play).

It appears to have been invented by a company named Isoft in 1981, released as a booter floppy for PC/XT. Alas, no copy seems to be available anywhere on the 'Net. Two other remakes can be found on defunct-but-archived webpages, although each of them has rules slightly different from the original (or at least from how I remember the original).

Unlike those two, this remake (which I made somewhere around 1990) tries to be exactly same as the original, in both gameplay and appearance — again, as exact as a 12 years old kid remembered a game he last played at an age of six.

What's missing is music and an alternate display mode that used CGA 40x25 text. On the other hand, the game is playable on any modern Unix-like system, with a vt100ish terminal whose character set includes glyphs of IBM ROM BIOS (aka CP437), obviously using Unicode.

Rules

The object of the game is to connect as much of blocks in your colour to the corners. The players take turns, being presented with four random tiles each turn.

Moving:

To make a move, choose one of the four tiles that were rolled for you. Next, choose a direction (up, left, right, down) and length (1-4). If a block of that length won't fit, it's silently cut to the longest length there's space for. (Hint: it's almost always beneficial to choose length 4).

Anchoring:

If the block you placed causes some blocks to be connected to one of the corners, you will be credited a point for every tile covered by a block in your color that's connected to a corner by an unbroken line (via cardinal directions only — diagonals are not enough).

Embracing:

There are two types of embraces:

  • complete embrace, when your blocks either completely enclose a part of the board or wall it in into a border
  • anchored embraces, which trade the requirement of enclosing only parts of the board that contain no free tiles for allowing braces that are connected only diagonally

Whichever player gets the most points, wins.