Wed Aug 11 2004 18:34 PST Games You Already Have Roundup IV: The Voyage Card Games:
I was apprehensive about this entire class of game because to my
mind the category-killer of card games is pysol, the Python framework that has
swallowed hundreds of solitaire games. But there weren't a whole lot
of them, so out of a sense of duty I went through them, and now I'm
glad I did because they're not what I expected. So here are the
reviews I wrote as I shelled pistachios for Pesto Pistachio (I should
have bought them shelled; this I realize now).
- AisleRiot: Starts off as a slavish Klondike klone of the Windows
3.1 Solitaire that made "computer" synonymous with "productivity
drain". Fortunately, can be turned into about 80 other card games a la
pysol. Nice acronym, and by default uses the Knuth font for the card
labels. As go attempts to tug on pysol's coattails, pretty good.
- Patience: KDE's attempt at a pysol type framework. Also starts up
as Klondike. Not as slick as AisleRiot, and only has 18 games,
including three difficulty levels of Spider. I like the card-flip
animation though (but not the card-turning-over animation, which I
find disturbing and smacking of witchcraft). Unlike AisleRiot, it can
play games on its own (and is actually easier to watch doing this than
pysol), though it can get into an infinite loop. Winner of KDE/Gnome
pale shadow of pysol smackdown: Gnome!
- Blackjack: Actually, this one's not in pysol. And this is a good
implementation. In a fit of anti-realism, will actually help you
improve your blackjack game by showing you the odds and giving you
hints in case you don't understand what the odds mean what with all
the confusing numbers between zero and one. It even does card counting
for you, and doesn't kick itself out (though I was able to crash it).
Downsides: somewhat unintuitive interface requires that you click
the dealer's hand to stand. Keeps your winnings (or losings) in some
Gnome persistence cubbyhole so it's like one eternal round of
blackjack your whole life unless you clear out the file or whatever
gconf uses. Figures out the optimal strategy for blackjack every time
it loads, which is a bit slow.
Since you have an unlimited amount of credit, I was thinking it
would be actually possible to do the thing where you double your bet
every time you lose and thus have an expected take of zero no matter
how long play or how unlucky you are. Unfortunately, a 500.00 (in a
nod to internationalization, there are no units; but I assume it's not
like 500.00 baht) per-hand limit stymied my plans, but I'm still
652.50 ahead after a few high-stakes rounds. This game is fun and
glamorous and statistical, but I can't stop thinking about the dealer
in the old BASIC
blackjack game who would give lame excuses like "THE CARDS HAVE
TURNED AGAINST ME" when he lost. Is there no place for heart in
your cruel modern technology? The heart provided by lousy
twenty-year-old technology?
Oh, I forgot to mention that there are a lot of rules knobs you can
tweak, but the rules are gathered into groups like "Atlantic City" and
"Vegas Strip". You can't tweak them individually. Anyway, this is a
good game and I wasn't expecting it.
- Freecell: I was worried this would be a whole nother program from
AisleRiot, but it's actually just AisleRiot set up to run Freecell
instead of Klondike. Good call, Gnome people. Next!
- KPoker: Can be played video-poker style or against one computer
opponent. I won $82 off the computer, which I know it has because I
paid several hundred dollars for this computer, but it won't pay
up. Deadbeat computer! When you win, has a little screen-saver like
wavy effect on the notification that you won which is a little queasy.
Remember, you click the cards you want to keep, not the ones
you want to discard. I traded a straight in for two pair by keeping
the one card I wanted to discard. Also, the computer is not a real
poker player--it never folds in response to an agressively played
hand, or does anything besides match your bets and optimize its
hand. So really it's just another type of video poker when you play
against the computer. But still not bad.
- Lieutenant Skat: I think this was one of those wartime movies
where Mel Tormé joined the army. Anyway, it's also a card game
implemented for KDE with a splash screen that looks just like what you
might see on the big LCD of a Vegas marquee in between ads for cheap
surf-and-turf. I always thought it was a solitaire game, but it's
actually a two-player game that is what War would be like if you tried
to make it into an actual game with real strategy and kung-fu grip.
Amusing German-sounding error messages like "This move would not
follow the rulebook. Better think again!" add to the Teutonic flavor.
- xmille: I don't know if this still comes with systems, but it
should. Consider it a bonus. Before KDE and Gnome and their big bundles of toys and games, there was a big bundle of toys and
games that came bundled with X Windows. This game stood among them. Someone should write a modern GUI
version of this because not everyone can stand the unadorned X widget
set, but I love this game. It's Milles Bourne, which is a classic card
game even though I've never played it with cards. It simulates a car
race where both contestants are trying to sabatoge their
opponents. It's a fun game, but a little weird, frustrating, and often
capricious; as with running for president, you can win the race yet
have thousands of points fewer than your opponent. Who wins? It
doesn't say.
So, that's all the X games that come with your standard Linux install
nowadays. Stay tuned for Games You Already Have Roundup V: The Final Toys.
Filed under:
games:roundup
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