1973 implementation of Wordle was published by DEC (2022)

(troypress.com)

58 points | by msephton 7 days ago ago

26 comments

  • voidUpdate 5 hours ago

    > While some have traced Wordle to Lingo, a game show that started in 1987, they’ve missed an earlier implementation: WORD was published in 101 Computer Games by Digital Equipment Corp. in 1973

    Which comes after the board game Mastermind, which was created in 1970 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastermind_(board_game))

  • PaulHoule 2 hours ago

    In 1980 they opened a new mall in Manchester, NH which was an hour from DEC’s headquarters and they had an actual DEC retail store that I bought a copy of that book from.

    Notably DEC machines like the PDP-11 gave a timesharing BASIC experience that was similar to having your own Apple ][ or TRS-80 but a little bit better, probably the best thing was saving your files on a hard drive.

    • loph an hour ago

      I still have a PDP-11 Programming Card I bought at that Digital retail store. That was an interesting place. As I recall, there also was a AT&T store in that mall where you could buy... telephones.

  • loph 3 hours ago

    This book: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BASIC_Computer_Games

    I was exposed to this book in about 1975 when I was in detention in the math teacher's room. It set me on a path to programming.

  • gbacon 3 hours ago

    The screenshots bring back memories of keying in BASIC on an Apple ][ monochrome green screen. With that intro, the first time I used QBasic, I remember marveling at not having to use line numbers.

    • emchammer 3 hours ago

      CALL -151 changed the course of my life.

  • oidar 5 hours ago

    you can play it here: https://troypress.com/wp-content/uploads/user/js-basic/index...

    The program is named "Word"

  • moomin an hour ago

    1970s? Way too recent. MOO dates from the 1960s and Bulls and Cows predates computers.

  • mwillis 3 hours ago

    Always thought Wordle and similar computer games were just variants of Mastermind, forms of which go back many decades, if not further. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mastermind_(board_game)

    • stronglikedan 3 hours ago

      The popularity of Wordle (nothing new under the sun) indicates that there may be something to the phrase, it's not the idea but the implementation.

      • II2II 3 hours ago

        It's probably more of a case of, "what's old is new again." While implementation undoubtedly has something to do with it, Wordle probably caught on this time around due to it's digital packaging, the popularity of things seems to go in cycles.

    • thaumasiotes 3 hours ago

      Yes? Wordle is Mastermind; the only variation is that most guesses are illegal.

      (Technically there are also more colors. I submit that the number of colors is not considered part of the ruleset of Mastermind.)

  • TMWNN 32 minutes ago

    Lawrence Hall is not a person, but a science museum at UC Berkeley. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Hall_of_Science>

  • sixothree an hour ago

    Not directly related but there was a game called Muddled that focused on anagrams of 7 letter words that was such a time waster for me. Probably because seven letter words seem so much more fun.

  • scythe 3 hours ago

    We used to play Wordle in high school. Except it was called "the five-letter word game", and it was a competitive enterprise, in which several people would take turns guessing and the winner chose the next word.

  • gedy 5 hours ago

    This is a case where the (2022) year thing really confuses!

    • brk 4 hours ago

      That and using Dec instead of DEC. Was having trouble parsing the title on this one.

      • mouse_ 3 hours ago

        HN does way too much "helpful" title normalization. @Dang pls fix

  • msephton 6 days ago

    DEC the company, not Dec the month. @dang

    • satiated_grue 4 hours ago

      Why did the programmer set up his Christmas tree on Halloween?

      Because OCT 31 == DEC 25