From: mauldin@lonestar.utsa.edu (Alex L. Mauldin) Date: 12 Feb 93 22:14:59 GMT Newsgroups: rec.games.mud.admin Subject: Magazine Article on MUDS Here's an article which appeared in the November 18th, 1992 issue of the _Chronicle_of_Higher_Education_. It's the first article I've seen in a major publication talking specifically about Muds. If anyone else has seen similar articles, then I'd appreciate some references for them. Anyway, for those interested, here it is: _____________ HOW STUDENTS SEE AN ARTIFICIAL WORLD by David L. Wilson A MUD, generally defined as a Multi-User Dungeon, is a kind of computer game that is increasingly popular on campuses around the world. Linked via the Internet and other computer networks, participants enter an artificial world where they can pretend to be aboard a space ship, play a character in a medieval village, or wander around a party conversing with people, aliens, and even household appliances. Almost all are text-based ------------------------- Very few of the hundreds of games use graphic images. Almost all MUDS are text-based, meaning that users must rely on a description of the settings and characters rather than on pictures. For instance, a person logging on to a game called "LambdaMoo" is greeted with the following message: The Coat Closet The closet is a dark, cramped space. It apprears to be very crowed in here; you keep bumping into what feels like coats, boots, and other people (apparently sleeping). One useful thing that you've discovered in your bumbling about is a metal doorknob set at waist level into what might be a door. There's a new edition of the newspaper. Type 'news' to see it. The bewildered can ask the computer for help with commands that will let participants move about. By typing the word "out," the user can leave the closet and enter "The Living Room," where other people logged on to the system can be "seen." Users can design their own characters, which can represent anything, from themselves to a vase of flowers. In the latter case, when the user left the closet, the other individuals in the living room would have read the words: "A vase of flowers enters," on their computer screens. Once in the living room, users can communicate with others in the room by typing words, which appear on the computers of every other person using the game at that moment. Users can move from room to room, "examine" objects, such as a "dog" that will rush up and wag its tail when anyone enters the room. 2 Important Elements -------------------- Amy S. Bruckman, a research assistant at the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology's Media Laboratory, has been studying MUDS and the people who use them. She says the two most important things about MUDS are that parti- cipants can design their own environment, and that much of what happens within a MUD involves interaction between people. "That's the difference between a MUD and basic information exchange," she says. "You've got this virtual world and you take on a virtual identity. Some people play themselves, and some people play fanciful characters which have nothing to do with themselves." For instance, she says, people in a MUD frequently masquerade as a person of the opposite sex in their interactions with others on the MUD. These and similar interactions give users new insights into themselves and others. But users can still make an educated guess about who's on the other end of the character, she says. "Chances are three to one that they're 19 and male and a computer-science student at a state university. That sums it all up." Are They Addictive? ------------------- Some are concerned about the games. "There seems to be something addictive about MUDS," says Claude W. Anderson, associate professor of computer science at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. "I've seen students' grades plummet because they were spending too much time on these things. We have a saying at Rose-Hulman: 'Friends don't let friends play MUD.'" Ms. Bruckman says her research has found that some do become obsessed with the medium. "One person talked about _cutting_down_ to 12 hours a day," she says. Ms. Bruckman rejects the word "addict" to describe those who, by their own admission, spend too much time on a MUD. "If someone takes heroin, you take a certain amount of it and you're addicted, and that's a property of the substance. For people who become obsessed with comm- unications media, it's more a function of them rather than the medium," she says. Most people who spend too much time in a MUD have other problems that they are working out, she says, and anonymous socialization may be helpful for them. But, she says, few users actually lose themselves in a MUD. "Most people are perfectly normal, with fine social skills, who use this a lot less than the average American uses television," she says. -------------------------------- Anyone have any comments about this article? I thought it was pretty interesting, even though the person writing it prolly didn't have a clue about MUDS before he started writing this article. I did think it was funny that LambdaMoo got a plug in here. Why couldn't he have used a MUD I play? - alex - -- * I have been one acquainted with the night. * I have walked out in the rain -- and back in rain. * I have outwalked the furthest city light. - Robert Frost