Plot: Difference between revisions

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==Links==
==Links==
* [http://dfisher.serverspeople.net/ifgems/gems_4.html#4.1 Plot] in the ''IF Gems'' review quotes collection (also available from the [http://mirror.ifarchive.org/if-archive/programming/general-discussion/IFGems.zip IF Archive]).
* [http://dfisher.serverspeople.net/ifgems/gems_4.html#4.1 Plot] and [http://dfisher.serverspeople.net/ifgems/gems_4.html#4.2 Plot Twists] in the ''IF Gems'' review quotes collection (also available from the [http://mirror.ifarchive.org/if-archive/programming/general-discussion/IFGems.zip IF Archive]).


[[Category:Glossary]]
[[Category:Glossary]]

Revision as of 10:37, 10 August 2007

What Aristotle called "the arrangement of the incidents," the plot of a work depends upon how its episodes are presented. A work of IF may have only one possible plot, as in Photopia. It may have several plots, as in Losing Your Grip. Most cave-crawl adventures have multiple plots because they have puzzles that can be solved in a different order each time. Although a work like the usual play or novel can be said to have a plot, a work of IF has one or more potential plots that are only realized during an interaction.

-- nm - 15 Jul 2002

Links