Software:Professional Adventure Writer

From HandWiki
Revision as of 15:21, 14 February 2024 by John Marlo (talk | contribs) (fixing)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Short description: Text adventure construction kit
Professional Adventure Writer
Paw.png
Start-up screen of PAW (ZX Spectrum version)
Publisher(s)Gilsoft
Designer(s)Tim Gilberts, Graeme Yeandle, Phil Wade
Platform(s)ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC
Release1987; 37 years ago (1987)
Genre(s)Construction kit, game creation, utility

Professional Adventure Writer or PAW (sometimes called PAWS for Professional Adventure Writing System) is a program that allows the user to write textual adventure games with graphic illustrations.[1] It was written by Tim Gilberts, Graeme Yeandle and Phil Wade, based on Yeandle's earlier system called The Quill.[2]

PAW was published by Gilsoft in 1987[3] and quickly gained a loyal following. PAW improved over The Quill in several ways.[4] In particular, its textual input parser was more sophisticated, meaning inputs were no longer confined to the two-word telegraphic verb noun (e.g. "GO WEST; TAKE LAMP") style. PAW also supported NPCs, different character sets, and full use of the memory of the 128K ZX Spectrum. However, unlike The Quill, the PAW no longer supported other computer systems like the BBC Micro or the Commodore 64. Over 400 games were written using PAW.[5]

To ensure that as much text as possible can be used, PAWS compresses the descriptions by replacing the most common letters combinations by tokens, using characters greater than 127 (the ones that, in the Spectrum, are used for storing the BASIC tokens).[6]

In 2001,[7] WinPAW was written by Douglas Harter. It could read adventures written in PAW, but ran under MS-Windows and had a few extensions to the original. The adventures made in WinPAW could only be played using the MS Windows runtime. In 2009, InPAWS was released in its first version. It allows to extract PAW adventures, edit them or create from scratch and write back a database for PAW for either Amstrad CPC or ZX Spectrum. Thus, it also allows PAW adventures to be ported between the systems.[8]

Graeme Yeandle also released an updated version of the CP/M version of PAW for MS-DOS and called it PC Adventure Writer.

References

  1. Crash 50
  2. Brewster, Derek (May 1987). "Professional Adventure Writer". Crash (40): pp. 54, 55. Archived from the original on 2017-09-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20170917075658/http://www.zxspectrumreviews.co.uk/Review.aspx?rid=6765&gid=4381. 
  3. The Professional Writing System: Introduction. Gilsoft International Ltd. 1987. p. 66. 
  4. "Your Sinclair Issue 18, June 1987". http://www.zxspectrumreviews.co.uk/Review.aspx?rid=9961&gid=4381. 
  5. Spectrum Computing: Professional Adventure Writer
  6. [1] The Professional Adventure Writer in tobobobo]
  7. [2] WinPAW version history
  8. InPAWS

External links