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Comment by kqr

16 hours ago

Funny -- I feel almost the opposite way! In modern games there's a very small set of action one can take in any situation (hence why game controllers can get by with so few buttons) whereas in text adventures, there are several dozens of plausible actions in any situation, down to details like "smell photo" or "break frame".

Sure, a modern game could implement breaking the picture frame as a narrative element, but then it would be telegraphed as "press X to break frame" -- one action in a small set possible at that time. The text adventure would also have to hint at it, of course, but it would be more subtle, like "there is a piece of paper wedged behind the picture" or whatever. The user would then have to figure out on their own that the frame is breakable.

Of course, that unparalleled freedom is also why good text adventures are difficult both to make and to play.