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Micro Adventure
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{{unsourced|date=July 2018}} '''Micro Adventure''' is the title of a series of books for young adult readers, published by [[Scholastic, Inc.]] during the 1980s. Created by Eileen Buckholtz and Ruth Glick, the YA series combined adventure stories with computer activities. [[Image:micro adventure book cover.jpg|right|framed|The cover of the first ''Micro Adventure'' book, ''Space Attack'']] The books are noted for the inclusion of short [[BASIC programming language|BASIC]] [[type-in program]]s related to the plot of the story that the reader could type into their computers, and also for the use of [[Grammatical person|second-person]] narration (rather like the [[Choose Your Own Adventure]] series, though unlike those, Micro Adventure storylines could not be influenced by the decisions of the reader). Through the second-person narration, the reader took the part of Orion, a computer expert and agent for the Adventure Connection Team, and followed the action in the continuing struggle against ACT’s nemesis, BRUTE (Bureau of Random Unlawful Terror and Evil). The plots generally resembled those typically found in other works of the [[secret agent]]/[[adventure]] [[genre]], ranging from [[sabotage]] aboard a [[space station]] to [[Android (robot)|android]] doubles of the [[President of the United States]], but differ from other works for their different approach to twists, and a lack of oversimplification. Most of the programs, even “shoot-em-up” games, were tailored towards novice programmers and designed to be small (none were over 2[[kilobyte|K]] in file size, a must given the limitations of some personal computers available at the time, such as the [[TI-99/4A]]). Instructions were included on how to "tweak" the programs to make them run on many popular home computers of the time. As a bonus, an appendix to each book gave step-by-step analyses of each of the programs in that particular book as a method of teaching simple [[computer programming|programming theory]] and construction. In 2017, Auri Rahimzadeh created a website to read the books and enter their programs in an on-page emulator.
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