Open Sorcery Abigail Corfman You are online. You are fire and order. You are a firewall. You are here to protect. ---- "Open Sorcery" is a game … $2.99 Buy Now Watch Media DetailsYou are online. You are fire and order. You are a firewall. You are here to protect. ---- "Open Sorcery" is a game about technology, magic and becoming a person. It follows the development of BEL/S, an Elemental Firewall: a creature of intertwined magic and code. It is text-based and uses the revolutionary Twine engine. There are 55,000 words of text, five animated sequences, and ten possible endings. In this game you can: * Search for malicious spirits * Protect your network * Make friends * Burn everything * Learn * Dream * Become sapient Information Seller:Abigail Corfman Genre:Adventure, Role Playing Release:May 06, 2016 Updated:May 23, 2017 Version:10 Size:18.0 MB TouchArcade Rating:Unrated User Rating:Unrated Your Rating:unrated Compatibility:HD Universal geoelectric Well-Known Member Apr 22, 2010 464 22 18 San Jose, CA #2 geoelectric, Sep 9, 2016 This was extremely short at around an hour, but I enjoyed it thoroughly. It's a hypertextual interactive fiction piece that I found to be well-scripted and consistently entertaining. It uses the hypertext engine to good effect, especially in portions that play with the story itself, and the framing device of essentially patrolling a beat works very well to pace the story. The scattered technological references worked for my inner nerd. It's a little expensive for the length but I'd really like to see more from this author. (You must log in or sign up to post here.) Show Ignored Content Share This Page Tweet Your name or email address: Do you already have an account? No, create an account now. Yes, my password is: Forgot your password? Stay logged in
This was extremely short at around an hour, but I enjoyed it thoroughly. It's a hypertextual interactive fiction piece that I found to be well-scripted and consistently entertaining. It uses the hypertext engine to good effect, especially in portions that play with the story itself, and the framing device of essentially patrolling a beat works very well to pace the story. The scattered technological references worked for my inner nerd. It's a little expensive for the length but I'd really like to see more from this author.