man greed (Jeux) - eat a game field until you run out of moves

NAME

greed - eat a game field until you run out of moves

SYNOPSIS

greed [-s]

DESCRIPTION

The object of Greed is to erase as much of the screen as possible by moving around in a grid of numbers. To move your cursor, simply use your arrow keys or the the 'hjklyubn' keys or your numberic Your location is signified by the @ symbol.

When you move in a direction, you erase N number of grid squares in that direction, N being the first number in that direction. Your score reflects the total number of squares eaten.

Greed will not let you make a move that would have placed you off the grid or over a previously eaten square. If no valid moves exist, your game ends.

Other Greed commands are 'Ctrl-L' to redraw the screen, 'p' to toggle the highlighting of the possible moves, and 'q' to quit.

The only ommand line option to Greed is '-s' to output the high score file.

ENVIRONMENT

Greed will detect color curses(3) support at compilation time. If you have it, Greed will generate the board in color, one color to each of the digit values. This will also enable checking of an environment variable GREEDOPTS to override the default color set, which will be parsed as a string of the form:

<c1><c2><c3><c4><c5><c6><c7><c8><c9>[:[p]]

where <cn> is a character decribing the color for digit n. The color letters are read as follows:

b = blue, g = green, c = cyan, r = red, m = magenta, y = yellow, w = white.

In addition, capitalizing a letter turns on the A_BOLD attribute for that letter.

If the string ends with a trailing :, letters following are taken as game options. At present, only 'p' (equivalent to an initial 'p' command) is defined.

FILES

/var/games/greed/greed.hs
Default location of Greed high scores.

AUTHORS

Originally written by Matt Day. Maintained by <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>. See ESR's home page at http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/: http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/ for updates and other resources.

BUGS

This really ought to be an X game, but that would have been too much like work.