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[[TravelComp]] was organized by [[Alexander Spiridonov|Alexander (Sasha) Spiridonov]] in 2001.
{{Event
{{stub|Needs Premise and summary of the contraversy.}}
|Type=Competition
|Series=No
|Organisers=Alexander Spiridonov
}}
'''TravelComp''' was organized by [[Alexander Spiridonov|Alexander (Sasha) Spiridonov]] in 2001. The theme was traveling. Only two entries were submitted. The one selected as the winner was written in Russian, and apparently received high praise from the organizer, inciting the community's interest; however, Spiridonov did not make it publicly available. The community questioned this choice. Spiridonov subsequently stated that he had received the two valid entries as well as "several invalid ones" and explained about the winning entry:
 
:As I have discovered later, the entry was not destined for this competition per se; rather, it was a long-lasting _commercial_ project. I do not know the reasons that motivated her to submit it as an entry. She made _no_ commitment to release the entry to the public; I never asked for one. The fact remains, however, that shortly before the deadline came, I received a ZIP disc containing the entry (programmed in Delphi). For reasons previously mentioned, I enjoyed the game, and awarded it first place. [https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.int-fiction/c/JMh6_bh7OrE/m/UfDqLsFFQJgJ]
 
He claimed to be unable to share the entry due to its large size, and owing to the author's intention to eventually release it as a commercial work.
 
==Entries==
==Entries==
Winning entries:
The two entries were awarded first and second place:
# ''[[Suddenly, The Trains Departed]]'' ([[Anna Rostovtseva]]; 2001; MS-Windows). [[Russian]]. Written in Delphi. Never released to the public.
# ''[[Suddenly, The Trains Departed]]'' ([[Anna Rostovtseva]]; 2001; MS-Windows). [[Russian]]. Written in Delphi. Never released to the public.
# ''[[On a Horse with No Name]]'' ([[Greg Ewing]]; 2001; [[Alan]]).
# ''[[On a Horse with No Name]]'' ([[Greg Ewing]]; 2001; [[Alan]]).


==Links==
==Links==
* www.dreamwater.org/sasha/travel.html was TravelComp's homepage; this link is broken.
* {{link|deadurl=http://www.dreamwater.org/sasha/travel.html|TravelComp's homepage}}. ''Unfortunately, this page was not captured by archive.org.''
* [https://groups.google.com/d/msg/rec.arts.int-fiction/JMh6_bh7OrE/7_vQS-nL2C4J This is the E[nd]] - The raif thread with the TravelComp results and the resulting controversy.
* [{{raif|msgid=fd7c35e9.0106280831.c730b80@posting.google.com|cmid=c/6k8lbtUF50g/m/XIIN-01E_g8J}} TravelComp starts tonight!] - Announcement of the comp on [[raif]], June 28, 2001.
[[Category:Minicomp]] [[Category:2001]]
* [{{raif|msgid=fd7c35e9.0108120701.613576e7@posting.google.com|cmid=c/JMh6_bh7OrE/m/7_vQS-nL2C4J}} This is the E[nd]] - The raif thread with the TravelComp results and the resulting controversy.
* {{ifarchive index|games/mini-comps/travel/}}.
 
[[Category:Minicomp]]  
[[Category:2001]]

Latest revision as of 14:57, 25 March 2024

TravelComp
Competition
Frequency
[[File:|385px|center]]
Part of series
Website [http:// ]
Organiser Alexander Spiridonov
IFDB event page Event
IFDB series page Series
Total entries
Edit this infobox

TravelComp was organized by Alexander (Sasha) Spiridonov in 2001. The theme was traveling. Only two entries were submitted. The one selected as the winner was written in Russian, and apparently received high praise from the organizer, inciting the community's interest; however, Spiridonov did not make it publicly available. The community questioned this choice. Spiridonov subsequently stated that he had received the two valid entries as well as "several invalid ones" and explained about the winning entry:

As I have discovered later, the entry was not destined for this competition per se; rather, it was a long-lasting _commercial_ project. I do not know the reasons that motivated her to submit it as an entry. She made _no_ commitment to release the entry to the public; I never asked for one. The fact remains, however, that shortly before the deadline came, I received a ZIP disc containing the entry (programmed in Delphi). For reasons previously mentioned, I enjoyed the game, and awarded it first place. [1]

He claimed to be unable to share the entry due to its large size, and owing to the author's intention to eventually release it as a commercial work.

Entries

The two entries were awarded first and second place:

  1. Suddenly, The Trains Departed (Anna Rostovtseva; 2001; MS-Windows). Russian. Written in Delphi. Never released to the public.
  2. On a Horse with No Name (Greg Ewing; 2001; Alan).

Links