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Classic Games (Games) Games

Roguelikes: the Misnamed Genre 201

ZorbaTHut writes "I've been playing a lot of Dungeon Crawl: Stone Soup lately. It's a great example of a roguelike (and open source, too). But I can't stop thinking that perhaps 'roguelike' is the wrong term for the genre. 'Roguelikes aren’t about dungeons. They’re not about text-based graphics, or random artifacts, or permadeath. ... Roguelikes are about using an unpredictable toolkit with complex interactions in order to overcome unpredictable challenges.'"
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Roguelikes: the Misnamed Genre

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  • Nethack (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @02:57AM (#35950570)

    Roguelikes are about incomprehensible control schemes utilizing every single key on your keyboard, twice!

    • Re:Nethack (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @03:01AM (#35950586)

      So vi and emacs are roguelike?

      • Re:Nethack (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Per Abrahamsen ( 1397 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @03:13AM (#35950622) Homepage

        I know it is a joke, but the connection is there. The original rogue is vi-like, adopting the cursor keys of vi.

        • by Imagix ( 695350 )
          Based on your UID number, you probably remember... but the keyboards at the time Rogue (and vi) came out didn't _have_ cursor keys. It would make sense that Rogue would adopt the "cursor" keys of the popular text editor of that time since everybody would be used to them.
          • by Kagura ( 843695 )
            If anyone has played ADoM, come try out the online SSH servers. They are very, very well implemented and the latency is a non-issue. Come visit #adom on irc.freenode.net to meet up with the community.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by hey hey hey ( 659173 )
            Based on your UID number, you probably remember... but the keyboards at the time Rogue (and vi) came out didn't _have_ cursor keys.

            You can't tell by my UID, but I was actually AT Berkeley when Rogue and vi came out. The ADM-3A terminal (which was by far the most common terminal there, and lots of other places) had a left arrow on the H, a down arrow on the J, a up arrow on the K and a right arrow on the L. Not cursor keys per-se, but a dang strong hint.
            • I love slashdot because of comments like this. Where else are you going to find such delicious mostly useless information of old computers? :)
          • by hardaker ( 32597 )

            And we didn't need them either! Now get off our lawn!

          • by steveha ( 103154 )

            the keyboards at the time Rogue (and vi) came out didn't _have_ cursor keys

            Not quite true. At the time of Rogue and vi, you would use a "dumb terminal" to connect to a multi-user ("time-sharing") computer. Most dumb terminals had arrow keys; the most popular dumb terminal of all time, the VT100, certainly did.

            But there was a common terminal, the ADM-3A [wikipedia.org], that did not have arrow keys. As others have noted here, it did have little arrows drawn on the H, J, K, and L keys, respectively left, down, up, and rig

        • Only because keyboards of the time did not routinely have arrow keys. And even today there's no standard way of encoding these keys that you can get via getchar(). VI used those keys because HJKL keys on some keyboards had arrow symbols on them (ie, adm3a), and that key system was used by people who didn't even know what vi was.

      • No. You also need pedals and a joystick to get the full functionality from vi and emacs.
    • Amen.

      You know, there are always debates raging online about whether keyboard and mouse, or controllers are a better control scheme. And while keyboards have advantages, you have to admire how the restricted amount of buttons on a controller forces designers to rationalise their control schemes.

      Keyboard based developers on the other hand never really have to face the problem of running out of buttons, and as such tend to designate every command to its own button, sometimes without any thought at all. Sometim

      • Re:Nethack (Score:4, Informative)

        by Elbereth ( 58257 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @05:25AM (#35951096) Journal

        NetHack isn't that bad, once you get used to it. Sure, you might think that q is an entirely random key to choose for drinking a potion (and you'd be right), but there's an mnemonic associate with it -- quaffing a potion. Once you start thinking in terms of the mnemonic, it's a lot easier, rather than struggling to remember which key is for drinking. The same is true of z, used for activating a wand. Again, this must seem entirely random, and you'd be right. However, the associated mnemonic is zapping a wand. Other commands are less defensible, such as Z, used to cast a spell. Once you've become familiar with zapping wands, however, it makes a little more sense.

        Play enough times and it'll become second nature to you.

        • The same is true of z, used for activating a wand. Again, this must seem entirely random, and you'd be right. However, the associated mnemonic is zapping a wand. Other commands are less defensible, such as Z, used to cast a spell.

          My mnemonic for zapping a wand versus zapping a spell is that it's less effort to "zap" a wand than to "Zap" a spell (hitting shift as well). It also carries over into dropping one item or many ("d" vs "D").

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by bhaak1 ( 219906 )

        Roguelikes have a long history and some of those old decisions don't fit well into the modern computer environments. For example vi-keys (although almost all modern roguelikes support numpad) are such a case. Without tradition, developers probably would use a solution base on the nowadays more common WASD.

        But there's also a reason for not changing. You've already got a lot of people familiar with certain concepts.

        As a NetHack fork developer I don't want to alienate the large Vanilla player base by introduci

        • I have been rather disappointed with the lack of rogue-likes on handheld devices such as the Palm. Blackberry, Android, et al. The early reasoning was that there was not enough memory and processing power on a handheld to handle nethack. But that can't be true anymore today. I mean nethack is an old game, having been played on 486s. Handhelds today have a lot more power than that and more memory than my first 486's hard drive (especially when the handheld is paired with a flash memory card).

          I've tried
          • by bhaak1 ( 219906 )

            There are several ports of NetHack on Android and iPhone. But in any case just search in the market places / app stores of your device. Don't expect an official version from the DevTeam.

            But especially with NetHack the amount of keys normally used is a real problem for a good port. NetHack's interface isn't easily translated on a hand held device.

            You might want to try POWDER [zincland.com] for a NetHack inspired roguelike that has been designed specifically for running on consoles. Which made it much easier to port to hand

          • I have been rather disappointed with the lack of rogue-likes on handheld devices such as the Palm. Blackberry, Android, et al. The early reasoning was that there was not enough memory and processing power on a handheld to handle nethack. But that can't be true anymore today. I mean nethack is an old game, having been played on 486s. Handhelds today have a lot more power than that and more memory than my first 486's hard drive (especially when the handheld is paired with a flash memory card). I've tried Dweller, and it's a nice, short, easily winnable, small feature set, but random levels game. I've tried some of the others and they aren't even up to Dweller's feature set. How hard would it really be to port nethack to these devices? (Hard enough I suppose, as it hasn't been done yet.)

            Isn't the fact that handheld devices don't have proper (or any but software) keyboards somewhat of a drawback?

            • I dunno, the keyboard on my Blackberry is pretty darned decent...
            • The hardware keyboard on my LG Ally makes playing the android port of nethack rather pleasant. Both the GP and you have need of purchasing cluefullness.

          • The best mobile port of nethack I've played is for the DS. Requires a flash cart, but it's really nice. Much better than the wince and ios ports, imo.
            The DS is a pretty good platform for roguelikes. Shiren the Wanderer, Izuna, and the Pokemon Mystery Dungeons are commercial roguelikes. Shiren's probably closest to the form.

      • by Hatta ( 162192 )

        Nethack is actually a perfect example of why all those keys are so useful. If you actually sit down and play it, before long the keys just become muscle memories. You don't have to remember whick key is what, and where it is. You just think 'pick lock' and it happens. I assure you, when it comes to beating nethack, memorizing the control scheme is a negligible part of the challenge.

        Rogue likes on consoles (e.g. Powder on the GBA) on the other hand force you to scroll tediously through menus. What else

    • DOWN WITH THE MOUSE! Say NO! to the oppresive GUI hegemoney! Long live CLI!
  • Diablo and its derivatives, Diablo 2 and Torchlight - are they Roguelikes?
    Quite crude for roguelikes, but the generated landscape changing with each game, varied monsters, levelled dungeon with ability to backtrace, random-generated items, and generally quite a bit of roguelike elements...
    I think the thing that could make them apart from the genre is lack of "turn-based" mode, kinda like an active pause - even entering the inventory does not pause. But is it enough?

    • Diablo is clearly heavily inspired by roguelikes, but there's really not that much of the original gameplay left. It would be like if I made a real-time strategy game with units like "pawn", "queen", and "king" and said it was a chesslike.
      • by bertok ( 226922 )

        That's actually a good analogy!

        Diablo is to Rougelikes as RTS games are to Chess.

      • In particular, it's inspired by Angband and Angband variants. There's not much of Nethack in there.

    • Yes they are. Same gameplay mechanics, same addiction rates. They are just to user friendly and too fun for ordinary person to be considered one by fans of genre.

      Fun fact: Diablo 1 was actually turn based in early stages of development.

      On the other hand Dwarf Fortress ( http://www.bay12games.com/dwarves/index.html [bay12games.com] , http://df.zweistein.cz/ [zweistein.cz] ) is also sometimes labeled roguelike. It seems like anything in text mode and arcane controls can get this label - even sims crossed with simcity.

    • by Tei ( 520358 )

      Diablo, Torchlight are Hack and Slash action RPG games.

      -Are not turn based.
      -Theres not permadead.
      -You "unlock" all the skills of your class... on a roguelike you grown in power, until you die.

      So, no, are very fart apart from roguelikes.

      • - Most have "hardcore mode" which is permadead.
        - in single player there is pause, which allows for pretty much same thing as turn-based.
        - unlocking skills of a class (spending exp at will) vs growing in power randomly is more like a flavor than a defining characteristics.

        • by JackDW ( 904211 )

          Pause isn't the same as turn-based at all. In a real roguelike, you get infinite time to consider your next move. And then you press a key and get exactly the move you wanted. This is the main reason why you can't have a multiplayer roguelike.

          • Multiplayer roguelikes have been around since roguelikes first appeared.... Use a vt100 terminal and log into the unix server and check them out. I used to play online with my buds back in 91, and they were pretty well advanced back then.

            • by JackDW ( 904211 )
              It's a question of definition. To me, a roguelike gives you as long as you want to make a move, and then allows you to specify exactly what you want to do. It's therefore neither real-time nor multiplayer. But clearly other definitions exist if (as some claim) Diablo is a roguelike.
        • complex interactions in order to overcome unpredictable challenges.

          diablo 2 -
          complex interaction = reapeatedly left click on monster
          unpredictable challenges = the same monsters that always spawn in that area
          Those are actually the key gameplay features that make a roguelike great, and the gaping holes in gameplay that make diablo 2 substandard.

      • Roguelikes no not need to be turn based. The online versions of nethack, rogue, etc have all been real-time, and they've been around for decades this way.

        Also, Diablo does have a permadead mode, it's called hardcore, and is VERY popular.

        The games are very similar. Diablo is basically a commercial roguelike.

  • maybe to you... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by waddgodd ( 34934 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @03:01AM (#35950584) Homepage Journal

    To the rest of us, rougelikes are just that, clones of rogue. Clearly Star Trek isn't a roguelike, yet it's "about using an unpredictable toolkit with complex interactions in order to overcome unpredictable challenges.", no?

  • by shutdown -p now ( 807394 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @03:02AM (#35950588) Journal

    "Roguelike" means "like Rogue [wikipedia.org]", no more and no less. There's no need to try to seek some deeper meaning in there. If the game has top-down view, intricate RPG-like stats, but mostly consists of slaying things rather than heavy NPC interaction and advanced storyline, it's a roguelike. All of these are necessary components - e.g. Stonekeep is not a roguelike, because it's first-person.

    As for the "new" definition in TFS/TFA, it's so vague as to be meaningless. Heck, it's broad enough to match contraption games (like Crazy Machines).

    • What about Dwarf Fortress?
      In the "adventurer mode" it is a clear-cut roguelike with a vast world to explore.
      In the "fortress mode" it becomes a strategy game (freely switchable between RTS and turn-based.) But still it utilizes the same game mechanics, the same world (to a degree where your adventurer may find and explore your fortress), and generally is just a different mode of the same game.

    • by arkenian ( 1560563 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @04:49AM (#35950990)

      "Roguelike" means "like Rogue [wikipedia.org]", no more and no less. There's no need to try to seek some deeper meaning in there. If the game has top-down view, intricate RPG-like stats, but mostly consists of slaying things rather than heavy NPC interaction and advanced storyline, it's a roguelike. All of these are necessary components - e.g. Stonekeep is not a roguelike, because it's first-person.

      As for the "new" definition in TFS/TFA, it's so vague as to be meaningless. Heck, it's broad enough to match contraption games (like Crazy Machines).

      While I mostly agree with your definition, I'd have to add 'random dungeon generation' as a key point. In some ways THE key point, more so I'd argue than 'top-down view'. (Although 'what will the red potion do to me this time?' was always fun. Also for those who think permadead is critical, I'll point out that there were workarounds....)

      • by alexo ( 9335 )

        I'd say that the the definition of "Roguelike" has evolved to mean a game developed by a self-appointed "dev team" who are too "elite" to communicate with mere mortals and have marked 468 bugs(*) as "fixed" while not releasing a single line of source in over 7 years.

        (*) Yes, I counted.

      • You're right - at least thinking of those roguelikes that I have played, they always had a strong random element when it came to maps (not necessarily 100% random everywhere, but certainly the majority of visitable locations).

    • by kikito ( 971480 )

      "Like" implies "more or less". Don't you know SQL?

      Something "like Rogue, but no more and no less", should be roqueequals, not roguelike.

      • "Like" implies "more or less". Don't you know SQL?

        In SQL, LIKE is an infix operator that takes a pattern as its second argument. To continue your analogy, the article is about nailing down the pattern of what kinds of interactions are "like Rogue".

    • Roguelikes are about using an unpredictable toolkit with complex interactions in order to overcome unpredictable challenges.

      Ah, so like Portal 2 and Angry Birds, right?

      • Ironically, I also considered making a point by giving Angry Birds as an example. But then I thought that, possibly, it's not quite unpredictable enough.

        Portal is spot on though.

    • "Roguelike" means "like Rogue [wikipedia.org]", no more and no less. There's no need to try to seek some deeper meaning in there.

      It's a silly problem, really, in which there's an organic development of forms, and then someone decides to justify their personal preferences by making up some abstract definition after the fact so that they can claim that things they don't like are objectively inferior to things they do like.

      Full disclosure: I enjoy playing the Android port of Angband [android.com] on my T-Mobile G2.

  • I googled to find out, but it would make a lot more sense for the summary to include at least a sentence to explain it.

    "I've been playing a lot of Dungeon Crawl: Stone Soup lately. It's a great example of a roguelike [short definition goes here]

    Maybe im asking a bit much from slashdot though. who knows.....

    • I share your sentiments, however, prepare to be trolled.
    • You must be new here.
    • The very article explains that it is hard to define "rogue-like" as anything except "similar to the game Rogue". I'm not sure what better description can be given, and if you want one linked, then TFA does actually go over what a Rogue-like game is.
      • text-based RPG, action shooter, bdsm riddled hack n slash, arcade fighter, driving simulation.....any of these could put in the summary to better define a roguelike.
        • by Rysc ( 136391 ) *

          Except for "hack and slash" none of those have any relation to roguelikes. In fact it's ridiculously hard to define roguelikes briefly, which is part of why they're still called roguelikee.

    • by EllF ( 205050 )
      I think that familiarity with roguelikes -- at least in terms of general context -- are an assumed part of the Slashdot culture. I hear you on the lack of explanation around obscure references to things that only a select group of folks know, but for those of us who have been around for a while, *hack doesn't really fall into that bucket. That said, the point of the article is that the genre supposedly defies easy explanation; offering a definition would be somewhat contrary to that point.
    • by Rysc ( 136391 ) *

      Is it technically permitted for someone to read Slashdot and not know what Rogue is?

      I'll define Roguelike for you: "You have died. Would you like to play again?" There's no other definition which is short and adequate to summarize the roguelike experience.

      (If you're at a loss here the answer is YES.)

  • by a_n_d_e_r_s ( 136412 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @03:08AM (#35950608) Homepage Journal

    Its a dupe from an earlier submission that was not deemed fit to become a story

    http://games.slashdot.org/submission/1543364/Roguelikes-The-Misnamed-Genre [slashdot.org]

    So its actually someone writing a story and then spamming the slashdot submission to get it in here.

    Sadly it's not better then the last time this sad story was submitted - can it please die - don't comment please.

    • It seems to be an attempt to promote links to his blog, yeah.

      The submitter didn't even bother including such details like yesterday's release of a new major version of Dungeon Crawl with a crapload of goodies. This is what I'd promote. Ok, ok, I do happen to be a member of the devteam so I might be a little biased too :p

    • That's odd - I only submitted it once, to the best of my knowledge, but I was having browser trouble at the time so something funky might have happened. However, I can guarantee that if it got submitted twice, they were both at roughly the same time.

      Are you sure that's not just what Slashdot does when a story is submitted?

    • by tsm_sf ( 545316 )

      The guy wrote a reasonably interesting article on his own personal blog and submitted it to /. twice.

      I'm failing to see why you're so butthurt over this.

  • The first thought that came to mind was "fucking hard". The next was RPG (that standa for "role playing game", not a term from a FPS that starts with "rocket").

    Someone asked if Diablo is a "roguelike". Well, Yes? No.

    The "roguelike" that I've played the most of is Nethack. Even when cheating outrageously (save scumming, fiddling with bones files, all the tricks in the book), I still can't win. It's just too fucking hard! But, I've played a lot of other RPGs (e.g. Exile and Avernum from Spiderweb Software), w

    • by daid303 ( 843777 )

      I enjoyed the Doom roguelike much more then nethack, it's easier to play (less options/buttons) but still a very good game.

      • by Omestes ( 471991 )

        I'm a huge fan of Tome4 (Tales of the something-something).

        I'm sure a lot of die-hard fans will get annoyed though, since it predominately tiled graphics and not text. And has a somewhat fixed map/structure with large randomly generated dungeons. There are different death options too, with hardcore being the most roguelike of them (perma-death, barring some hard to get items), but you can also have limited lives. I like it since it bring lots of modern conventions to the genre, and makes them a bit less

    • Nethack

      hard

      No. It's actually not that hard. Most games tell you to attack everything headfirst. 2 important tips:
      1. Don't ever melee more than 1 enemy unless you are 100% certain you can take them all. Narrow corridors and wands are your friend.
      2. http://nethackwiki.com/ [nethackwiki.com] specifically http://nethackwiki.com/wiki/Identification [nethackwiki.com] learn to do this

      You can practice in explorer mode by typing capital X. Get to the point where you don't die much at all.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        Sheesh, God forbid anyone actually try to play the game as it was intended, rather than use every bit of fun-draining information available on the net to make the game into an 'achievement' instead of 'fun'.
        • Nethack isn't really intended to be winnable without spoilers. DCSS is, though, but still a good deal of the fun is talking about it, exchanging strategies and ideas.

          • by Rysc ( 136391 ) *

            I disagree. It is entirely possible to win nethack without ever reading a guide or cheating, it just requires repetition. I know these day's it's considered horrifically bad if you can't win a game the first time you play through it but, thankfully, this poison has not spread to most roguelikes. Go, play, die. Keep learning, keep repeating until you understand what to do and what not to do and can survive to the end.

            If you didn't want to play that kind of game I can recommend a number of fluffy web games wi

        • Some of us like to research and plan how we play our games, kind of a meta-game, the thrill is in imagining all the possibilities. To that end, the Nethack devs actually did a good job of anticipating silly things people would try to do (e.g. "That is a potion bottle, not a Klein bottle!" when attempting to dip a potion into itself).
    • by bmo ( 77928 )

      >It's just too fucking hard!

      I think the "giant's drink" game in Ender's Game is nethack.

      I could be wrong. But I've never seen the balrog so I can't say that the balrog is /not/ the giant.

      --
      BMO

    • by mcvos ( 645701 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @04:32AM (#35950936)

      Roguelikes don't have anywhere near enough roleplaying (none whatsoever, generally) to be RPGs. They're basically simple hack & slash games, but what makes them interesting is the tactical problem solving. You encounter a monster, swarm of monsters or other situation that's just too hard to overcome by your usual methods, so you need to think of something clever. You need to think, and you need time to think (which you don't have in an action game).

      This is something all true roguelikes (nethack, moria, angband, adom) have in common. They are incredibly challenging and almost impossible to win. (I only managed to finish adom once through outrageous save scumming.) They require thinking and creativity. They need to be turn based and have a ridiculous number of options. They have to be fucking hard. It's about overcoming the challenges, not about experiencing some story (because there is none).

      • by Hatta ( 162192 )

        Of course rogue-likes have a story. It's just that you write the story as you play, and it's different every time.

        • by mcvos ( 645701 )

          It's a pretty lousy story, though.

          "I met a goblin and I killed it. Then I met an orc and I killed it. Then I saw a troll and I ran away. My dog got killed."

          If that's a story, then there's no game that doesn't have a story. Maybe nearly dying and escaping from a deadly situation is dramatic enough for a story, but the same could be said about any game where you snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.

          • "I met a goblin and I killed it. Then I met an orc and I killed it. Then I saw a troll and I ran away. My dog got killed."

            Go back to the Country Music Channel!

    • by Hatta ( 162192 )

      Nethack is absolutely beatable. If you're already cheating, go ahead and read the spoilers. Memorize them. For every way you can die in Nethack, there's a way to avoid it. Learn to avoid crises before they happen. If you're not 100% sure something is safe, don't do it.

      Once you figure out how to stay alive long enough to piece together most of an ascension kit, the rest of the game is pretty straightforward.

  • If you're not searching for the amulet of yendor, it doesn't count. It all started going wrong with nethack...

    • Why? Because simply finding the AoY deep in a dungeon is good enough? Let's not make it more difficult by requiring you to actually ESCAPE the pits of hell with the amulet. /sarcasm

      I played plenty of rogue, nethack, moria, angband and even a little bit of larn back in the day. Nethack was far and away the best of them, balancing fear of insta-death, inside jokes, variability of game-play, etc. However, moria and angband were solid games in their own right. I particularly enjoyed how easy it was to fidd

  • by Urkki ( 668283 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @04:10AM (#35950848)

    Roguelikes are games that are like Rogue [wikipedia.org] both in game play and in appearance (IMHO graphical tiles and even isometric or 3rd person 3D are allowed, as long as it doesn't affect game play, though purists may disagree).

    The summary tries to imply there's some deeper meaning behind the word, but really, there isn't.

  • You know when Spelunky is described as a roguelike, there's some serious issues with genre naming. Defining is a roguelike is pretty simple. Dungeon crawler - saving = roguelike. It's certainly a far better definition than "...an unpredictable toolkit with complex interactions in order to overcome unpredictable challenges." Um... you could say the same about platform games or almost any other genre of game for that matter when you first play them. And the "toolkit" itself isn't unpredictable - even if the i
    • by Jaqenn ( 996058 )
      I would heartily call Spelunky a roguelike. Random levels, frequent death, and a learning style where you don't get taught what something does before you interact with it the first time.

      For the record, Toejam & Earl count too.
  • by cgomezr ( 1074699 ) on Wednesday April 27, 2011 @07:23AM (#35951550)

    That the term "roguelike" is vague is a well-known fact, but there are definitions around much better than the one in the article: http://roguebasin.roguelikedevelopment.org/index.php?title=What_a_roguelike_is [roguelikedevelopment.org]

    The distinguishing features of roguelikes are random world generation, permadeath, complexity of item interaction, RPG-like stats, killing scores of monsters, grid-based motion, turn-based mechanics and arguably ASCII interface. A game may be a roguelike and not have all of these, but if it has, say, all but two, it is undoubtedly a roguelike.

    The reasoning in the article that leads into calling "Super Smash Bros Brawl" a roguelike is just ludicrous. Of course there is no limit to how one can redefine a term, but one should not expect to be taken seriously after saying that every animal with four paws should be called a dog. Saying that "Super Smash Bros Brawl" is a roguelike because it is complex in some way goes against the common use of the word. The author of the article should find a different name for what he means.

    • Did you read the part of the article where I say that I need a different name for this new concept? :P

      • I did, but then the problem is not with the term "roguelike" or its name. You want to define a totally different concept, which is orthogonal to "roguelikeness". So the term "roguelike" is not a misnomer.

  • Roguelikes are about using an unpredictable toolkit with complex interactions in order to overcome unpredictable challenges

    I thought rouguelikes were for proving I had more of Teh Nerd than the next guy.

  • Is it really a misnamed genre if no one has heard of it?

  • Play rogue [hexatron.com]

    If you play another game, and it seems a lot like rogue, then it's roguelike.

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