Imaginary is an experimental simulation-construction toolkit.
Be warned! We aren't kidding when we say "experimental". Many features are not implemented yet and documentation is incomplete. We think there are some pretty cool ideas here, but if you are intending to use this system, be prepared to participate heavily in its development.
Imaginary can be used to build both single-player interactive fiction, text adventures for small groups of friends, or large multiplayer games.
To get it installed, you will need to install some dependencies. Due to a series of unfortunate events, you need to run pip
manually a couple of times, rather than simply installing the package directly. (We're working on fixing this.)
$ pip install twisted
$ pip install epsilon
At this point, you may just do:
~/Projects/Imaginary$ pip install . ./ExampleGame
... but if you want to develop Imaginary itself (and you probably do, because as we explained above, it's still in a very early state), you can set up an editable install with:
~/Projects/Imaginary$ pip install -e . -e ExampleGame
To get started, first you'll need a world file. There's an example world in doc/examples/example_world.py
.
To load that world, run
$ python -m imaginary doc/examples/example_world.py
A "world" for a single-player game is simply a Python file with a function called world
in it, that returns an instance of an ImaginaryWorld
. The example contains several useful items, and until there is more thorough documentation you should be able to construct your own example by modifying it.
If you're interested in setting up a multi-player Imaginary server, see MULTIPLAYER.rst
.