![]() ![]() ![]() BrightBlueJim on BBC Basic Is Back In A Big Way.bebop on Mobile Phones And The Question Of Declining Sperm Quality.on Fail Of The Week: This Flash Drive Will NOT Self-Destruct In Five Seconds J Samson on Swatch Internet-Time Clock Doesn’t Miss A Beat.Hackaday Podcast 245: The Silver Swan, ET’s Umbrella Antenna, Model Tanks Vs Space Shuttle Tires No comments Posted in Toy Hacks Tagged board game, classic game, Feather S2, momentary buttons, TFT LCD Post navigation We have to admit, we’re pretty jealous.ĭon’t want to amass an army and conquer evil forces? There are all types of board games you could emulate with a microcontroller. Between a PDF of the original rule book and someone’s Java version of the game, had plenty to use as a guide for programming in the rule set before mailing it off to their friend. After a bit of tweaking and some hole-punching, had a mini tower scaled to the Feather S2 with just enough room to stuff in all the components and wires. ![]() got mighty lucky when it came to the case, as had already created a dice tower version and put it on Thingiverse. The screen can show all the pictures, (which were only displayed one at a time in the original game anyway), any necessary numbers, and all the requisite menu options. pulled it off with a Feather S2, a 320 x 420 TFT LCD screen, a speaker, and a couple of momentary buttons. In this day and age, it doesn’t take much to reproduce the internals of the Tower. You can check out the build video below, which has plenty of links, including one that goes to the code. Fortunately for us, the project is completely open source. Working copies of DarkTower go for hundreds online, but who can afford such an extravagance when these 40+ year old towers are prone to battery leakage and loose connections? Certainly not, who was hoping to give the gift of DarkTower to a friend and decided to build a mini reproduction instead. Thanks to a lawsuit, few copies remain, and even fewer of them are in working condition. The Tower itself was a battery-powered computer on lazy Susan that showed numbers on a couple of 7-segment displays, pictures via three carousels, and had a 12-button keypad. Orson Welles pimped it on TV and explained it thusly: “collect three keys, lay siege to the tower, and defeat the enemy within”. Remember DarkTower? No? Well, it’s a really cool combination board game, RPG, and computer game from 1981. ![]()
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