Monthly Archives: September 2016
Obduction is a really good adventure game. You should play it.
I finished the game a week ago and I've had a heck of a time thinking of anything to say. To be sure, my Myst review was written in 2002 and my Myst 5 review in 2010, so the sensible course is just to wait five or ten years and see where Cyan's gotten to. An Obduction review will make an excellent retrospective.
But I do want you to buy the game. (To help make sure Cyan makes it another five or ten years.) So, yeah, it's a really good game and you should play it.
Tags: adventures, cyan, if, interactive fiction, myst, obduction, puzzles, riven, the witness.
(This has been widely noted, but I wanted to summarize what's known.)
At the beginning of September, some Dropbox users got email:
We’re writing to let you know that we’ll be discontinuing the ability to render HTML content in-browser via shared links or Public Folder. If you're using Dropbox shared links to host HTML files for a website, the content will no longer display in-browser.
(Text copied from a post on the ChoiceOfGames forum -- thanks jeantown.)
Dropbox has posted a more complete summary on their web site:
Dropbox Basic (free) users: Beginning October 3, 2016, you can no longer use shared links to render HTML content in a web browser. If you created a website that directly displays HTML content from your Dropbox, it will no longer render in the browser. The HTML content itself will still remain in your Dropbox and can be shared.
Dropbox Pro and Business users: Beginning September 1, 2017, you can no longer render HTML content.
In other words, in a month (for free users) or twelve months (for paid users), people will no longer be able to play your HTML-based games directly off of Dropbox. They'll either appear as raw HTML or as "download this file" links -- it's not clear which. (Other kinds of files, such as images or CSS files, will not be affected.)
Tags: dropbox, if, interactive fiction, mastaba snoopy, mime types, twine.