Featured project
Retro-eXo / eXo Project
Retro-eXo is the public-facing home of the eXo Project — a community-driven preservation initiative
best known for curated DOS-era collections. It provides background, documentation, and access points
for the wider project, and has strong overlap with text adventures, graphic adventures, and other
narrative-driven games from the DOS era.
- Strong preservation overlap with interactive fiction and adventure titles
- Curated approach rather than a loose dump of files
- A good companion to Sidon’s museum-style editorial approach
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Digital archive
Internet Archive
One of the most important digital preservation efforts anywhere on the web, the Internet Archive
provides access to software, books, scans, audio, video, and archived websites. For adventure history,
it is especially valuable for period magazines, software collections, and web material that may no longer
exist in its original form.
- Historic software and documentation
- Magazine and manual preservation
- Website capture through the Wayback Machine
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Reference database
IFDB
The Interactive Fiction Database serves as a major catalogue and recommendation resource for interactive
fiction. It brings together game listings, reviews, authorship information, tags, and cross-links that
help modern readers and researchers navigate a very large body of work.
- Game entries and metadata
- Community reviews and lists
- Useful starting point for cataloguing work
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Repository
IF Archive
The IF Archive has spent decades preserving the history and practice of interactive fiction.
It contains games, tools, source material, articles, walkthroughs, and a huge range of community resources
that would be difficult to reconstruct once lost.
- Games and development tools
- Articles, essays, and support material
- Long-term cultural memory for the IF community
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Playability
ScummVM
ScummVM is especially significant because it is not merely emulating old hardware. Instead, it reimplements
supported game engines so that many classic adventures can still be played on modern systems with better
accessibility and portability.
- Engine reimplementation rather than straight emulation
- Supports many classic adventures
- Vital for long-term playability
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Emulation
DOSBox
DOSBox recreates a DOS-compatible environment and remains one of the most important tools for keeping
older PC adventures accessible. For many players, it has been the bridge between original DOS releases
and modern computers.
- Preserves the ability to run DOS titles
- Important for many late-1980s and 1990s adventures
- Often part of modern curation workflows
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Community archive
CASA
The Classic Adventures Solution Archive is one of the most valuable community-led resources in the field,
covering classic text adventures across multiple systems and languages. It preserves not only solutions,
but also hints, maps, reviews, and obscure corners of adventure history that might otherwise slip away.
- Solutions, maps, and hints
- Coverage of obscure and forgotten titles
- Strong relevance to classic text adventures
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Spectrum heritage
World of Spectrum
For Spectrum-era adventure history, World of Spectrum remains a major preservation landmark. It preserves
software, hardware references, magazines, books, publisher records, and the wider culture around the
platform, making it extremely valuable for context as well as raw data.
- Games, publishers, people, magazines, and books
- A strong example of platform-specific preservation
- Useful for company and release research
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Web memory
Wayback Machine
Old websites are often the only surviving home for interviews, fan documentation, dead download pages,
and project notes. The Wayback Machine is indispensable when reconstructing vanished scenes, defunct groups,
or the changing public history of a game or company.
- Captures earlier versions of websites
- Useful for tracing lost pages and dead links
- Important for modern research workflows
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Research layer
What Sidon can add
The preservation projects above do essential work. Sidon Adventure Archive can complement them by adding
museum-style interpretation: exhibit pages, creator interviews, packaging galleries, technical notes,
cross-linked company histories, and editorial context that helps visitors understand why these materials matter.
- Curated exhibits rather than raw listings
- Interviews and first-hand testimony
- Historical context alongside preserved artefacts
Learn about the archive