Any good text based games anymore?

I used to like text-based games, even as far as when I got Windows 98 on my computer. This delightful site points out the biggest flaw of them, which was that they were horribly unforgiving when it came to giving the proper command.

Nowadays, it seems like that would be less of a problem, what with more sophisticated AI and spellcheck and the like. Has any purist tried to resurrect the genre, or is it dead and gone forever?

MUD’s are still alive and well.

Text adventures are called Interactive Fiction these days, and there is a band of hobbyists still churning them out. Some of the games are pretty good. There are a few IF archives on the internet. Lots of info at http://www.ifreviews.org/ .
[ETA]… and I see now that your link already mentions interactive fiction

Here is a game that is somewhat recent that uses text inputs mixed with graphics, just like the oldest Sierra games(King’s Quest 1-4, etc.)

Great game, by the way.

Trilby’s Notes

How fondly I recall being a lad playing Zork on his Commodore 64…

I play AVATAR MUD a lot. It is a (family friendly) medieval fantasy MUD and I have been playing it for years. I do love mages.

Photopia by Adam Cadre.

Note: it emphasizes the “fiction” part of “interactive fiction”. You can easily finish it in less than an hour.

Cadre is one of the more experimental authors in the IF genre. All of his IF works can be downloaded from his website: adamcadre.ac: interactive fiction

Fun games, though some of them are really tough. E.g. Varicella is designed to be tough. Real tough. In fact, in order to win without looking up a walkthrough, expect to play the thing multiple times (and I don’t think it’s possible to win the first time). Because a lot of the puzzles are time-critical. (In fact, you need to examine everything, but take notes, because you will never complete time-critical tasks by wasting time examining things. There are things that happen on a fixed turn, and if you aren’t in the right place, you miss it.) That being said, none of the puzzles are unfair.

No indeed, considering especially the bit where you need to know that characters A and B are interacting in location A at a specific time so that you can bring character C to location B so that you can watch them over a closed-circuit TV.

In fact, I had to go back to the beginning when doing Varicella via a walkthrough because I mixed up east and west and thought I’d have time to just walk back the other way (instead of immediately "UNDO"ing).

Andrew Plotkin has some good games out there as well, though some of them (like DUST) aren’t really games as such.