3D Maze
3D Maze is the name used for a screensaver made in OpenGL that was in Microsoft Windows from Windows 95[1] to Windows ME.
Overview
changeAll mazes have random paths, and start at a floating start button. The maze is automatically solved with the left-hand rule, which always works because it is simply connected.
The maze has brick walls, a wooden floor and an asbestos tile ceiling. Custom pictures can be used. Later versions include animated psychedelic patterns.
The maze has floating "OpenGL" logos, globe images on the walls (from the OpenGL Programming Guide's cover), and an image of a rat also moving through the maze. Touching polyhedric gray rocks flips the camera upside down and swaps the floor and ceiling. Reaching the exit or touching another gray rock switches them back.
The maze's exit is a floating, translucent smiley face. Touching it resets the screensaver.
A 2D map, which uses simple vector graphics, can be enabled. The "player" is shown as a blue triangle, the start as a red triangle, the smiley face as a green triangle, the rocks as rotating white triangles, the OpenGL logos as stationary white triangles, and the rat as an orange triangle.
Legacy
changeCornell University's Maze in a Box, which draws 3D graphics with a Atmel Mega32 microcontroller, was inspired by 3D Maze.[2] In 2017, independent video game developer Cahoots Malone used assets from the original ssmaze.scr file to make it into Screensaver Subterfuge, a video game.[3]
XScreenSaver 5.39, released in April 2018, has a similar screensaver, Maze3D, which was made by "Sudoer".[4][5]
Reception
changeWriting for Bustle, Jessica Blankenship knew of nothing as "mesmerizing, alluring, frustrating, and exquisite" as getting lost in 3D Maze.[6] Slate's Jacob Brogan said 3D Maze is a "harried, first-person rush through a brick-walled labyrinth" and similar to an "intelligence at work", and compared it to watching one's grandparents play Wolfenstein 3D "while sitting in silence as they haplessly mashed the keypad".[7]
References
change- ↑ Fick, Wesley (7 December 2012). "Oldie But Goodie: Losing your mind in a maze". Retrieved 9 February 2016.
- ↑ Kauffman, Jeffery. "Maze in a Box". Retrieved 9 February 2016.
- ↑ Axon, Samuel (20 November 2017). "The dream of the '90s is alive in this Windows 95 screensaver indie game". Ars Technica. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
- ↑ "XScreenSaver: Download".
- ↑ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Maze3D: From the XScreenSaver Collection, 2018. YouTube.
- ↑ Blankenship, Jessica. "The Windows 95 Maze Screen Saver Is Still The Most Sublime Way To Go Into A Computer Coma – VIDEO". Bustle.com. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
- ↑ Brogan, Jacob (31 July 2017). "What Were Screen Savers?". Slate.com. Retrieved 15 September 2019.