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  1. obituaries.count

    What the user sees is a black-and-white, rectangular obituary in the middle of the
    computer screen which addresses the victims of the last Iraq war. By letting the languages
    and the meaning the textual fragments create fluctuate, the author emphasises
    the fact that obituaries are a global phenomenon, the rhetorics of which are replaceable
    and interchangeable regardless of where these are being written or read. The date of
    the obituary is always the same as the actual date the text is read on, thus the text
    gains the quality of actuality and credibility at the same time. Furthermore, in order to
    increase the desired artistic effect, the author has put a body-count at the bottom of the
    page, which is incremented roughly every second. Furthermore, there are strong sounds
    of war, such as machine-gun fire, and screams of women and children in the background.

    (Source: Roman Zenner "Hypertextual Fiction on the Internet: A Structural and Narratological Analysis")

    Scott Rettberg - 16.07.2013 - 16:27

  2. Boromir Death Simulator

    This is a text-based re-enactment of Boromir's death scene from The Fellowship of the Ring. The simulation uses Dungeons and Dragons 3rd Edition rules.

    It was originally implemented in Python in 2003. It was ported to HTML5 in 2011.

    The HTML5 version uses the Application Cache to enable offline use, and has been tested on IE8, Opera, Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and iOS.

    (Source: Author's description, Github)

    Filip Falk - 26.09.2017 - 22:48