Hmmm, very close, and I thank you very much, but I was looking for a game that's D&D based where the computer acts as the DM, and it guides you through the quests and gives you choices on what to do. If anybody knows of a game like that, that would be great.
So I'm playing Secret of Mana with my friend Senate over ZSNES. We just got to The Empire (more than halfway through the game), and he's still wearing his fucking power wrist. It has 4 defense, as opposed to the ~20 defense from the armor available to us right now (this makes a lot of difference in the world of mana), but he keeps it anyways because it has +5 STR which he is convinced is more important than any amount of defense (it's not).
So while we were in the shop at The Empire, he gave up control of his character for a moment to go AFK, so I popped into his inventory and unequipped his power wrist so I could sell it and buy a Golem Ring instead. He noticed soon after he returned that his power wrist was missing, and became irate.
So now we're on our way to "potatos" (he means Potos Village) to buy back his power wrist. What he doesn't know is that he can buy it at the shop we just left in The Empire.
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Anonymous2007-06-27 2:36 ID:4GQg5A9C
well dont u just have the best life ever!
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Anonymous2007-06-27 23:58 ID:8AyNTONE
>>4
I used to have links to a few of those. I need a couple of days to find where I stored the links.
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Anonymous2007-06-28 0:05 ID:IHEBsdz9
>>6
The gui is a core part of windows (the actual graphics subsystem, not explorer itself), so you would have to make changes to the way windows works. If you did that, you may be able to run windows without the gui. The problem is, only a few utilities are designed for command line, anyways. Your best bet would be to install cygwin as it would give you windows versions of most unix programs, including a compiler.